El Niño
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Inspired by J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace, El Niño tracks the survival of one woman and a young, undocumented migrant as they journey through the no-man’s-land of a remote southwestern desert.
Honey hasn’t seen her mother, Marianne, in more than two years. She drives deep into the once-prosperous border region of the Oro Desert for a surprise visit, only to discover that Marianne has vanished.
Alone in an unforgiving environment populated with hostile locals, she meets Chávez, a young “coyote” or human trafficker, who convinces Honey he knows her mother’s whereabouts and agrees to take her there — for a price. As they make their way through the Oro’s brutal no-man’s-land they are tracked by Ocho, a teenage bounty hunter determined to recruit Chávez. And then there is Baez, Marianne’s wizened Shepherd-coyote mix, whose death and life intimately intersect with Honey and Chávez's search for Marianne and who tells the story of the Oro Desert as it slowly comes apart.
Told in three distinct voices, El Niño is an intricately constructed and starkly written novel from a bold and inventive new writer.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The second novel in Bozak's Border trilogy, following Orphan Love, is challenging but worthwhile for readers who are up to following its three narrators through shifting timelines. It's set in a fictional desert landscape near the U.S.-Mexico border at a time when a wall is being built to keep unwanted migrants out of the U.S. Honey, a wealthy woman, drives south from her home in Buzzard City for an impromptu visit with her elderly mother, Marianne, a painter who lives with her Shepherd-coyote dog, Baez, in a rundown trailer where she sometimes helps boys trying to cross the nearby border. When Honey arrives, she discovers Marianne is missing. Honey meets Chavez, a young "coyote" or human trafficker, who claims to know the whereabouts of her mother, and offers to pay him to guide her to Marianne. Thus begins a parched journey through the desert heat and into the stories of Chavez, his friend Juan, and those desperate to immigrate. Narration alternates among Honey, Chavez, and Baez. Stark imagery (some of it gruesome and shocking) and abrupt time shifts impart a surrealist feeling to this provocative novel as Bozak transports readers into the brutal world of human smuggling.