by Ed Lin
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
Set in New York City in 1976, Snakes Can't Run finds NYPD
detective Robert Chow still haunted by the horrors of his past and relegated to
tedious undercover work. When the bodies of two undocumented Chinese men are
found under the Brooklyn Bridge underpass, Chow is drawn into the case. Most of
the officers in his precinct are concerned with a terrorist group targeting the
police, but Chow's investigation puts him on the trail of a ring of ruthless
human smugglers who call themselves the snakeheads. As Chow gets closer to
solving the murder, dangerous truths about his own family's past begin to
emerge. Steeped in retro urban attitude, and ripe with commentary on
minorities' roles in American society, this gritty procedural will appeal to
fans of George Pelecanos and S.J. Rozan.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT
The mind is a funny thing.
After I got on the wagon and fell in love with a girl, I started seeing my
father out in the streets. I didn't literally see his ghost walking around, but
I'd see his nose in profile on another guy's face. Sometimes I'd be walking
behind someone who had his slouchy shuffle, his spotted ears, or the back of
the head that looked like an elderly porcupine with spikes gone soft and white.
One time, a hand reached out
to my shoulder and touched me exactly where he used to touch me from his chair
after dinner to ask me to get him a beer from the fridge.
Of course it wasn't my
father. It was an older guy who wanted to know if I was the guy whose pictures
used to be in all the Chinese newspapers. The man was almost completely bald
and had two light brown spots on the top right of his head that looked like an
imprint from a woman's high-heeled shoe.
He called me the Sheriff of
Chinatown. I tried to get away from him as soon as possible, but he was one of
those people who liked to say good-bye and then ask another question just when
you're about to part. The guy ended up grabbing both of my hands twice before I
was able to make the corner and get away. I checked that my wallet was still in
my pocket, though, just in case he had been working me with a partner. I guess
he was genuinely glad to meet me.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ed Lin, a native New Yorker of
Taiwanese and Chinese descent, is the first author to win three Asian American
Literary Awards and is an all-around standup kinda guy. His books include
Waylaid and This Is a Bust, both published by Kaya Press in 2002 and 2007,
respectively. Snakes Can't Run and One Red Bastard, which both continue the
story of Robert Chow set in This Is a Bust, were published by Minotaur Books.
His latest book, Ghost Month, a Taipei-based mystery, was published by Soho
Crime in July 2014. Lin lives in Brooklyn with his wife, actress Cindy Cheung,
and son.
Facebook: None
Website: None
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION
Ed
Lin will be awarding a limited edition print copy of the book to a randomly
drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
Visit the other blogs on the tour:
October 9: Sharing Links and Wisdom
October 10: Long and Short Reviews
October 11: Straight From the Library
October 12: Laurie's Thoughts and Reviews
October 13: Lisa Haselton's Reviews and Interviews
October 16: C.A.Milson
October 17: Mello and June, It's a Book Thang! - promo
October 18: Hope. Dreams. Life... Love
October 19: Angels With Attitude Book Reviews
October 20: The Avid Reader
October 23: Jazzy Book Reviews
October 24: Readeropolis
October 25: Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer
October 26: Rainy Day Reviews - promo
October 27: Mixed Book Bag
October 30: Christine Young
October 31: Harlie's Books
November 1: Dina Rae's Write Stuff
November 2: T's Stuff
November 3: Sea's Fire
October 10: Long and Short Reviews
October 11: Straight From the Library
October 12: Laurie's Thoughts and Reviews
October 13: Lisa Haselton's Reviews and Interviews
October 16: C.A.Milson
October 17: Mello and June, It's a Book Thang! - promo
October 18: Hope. Dreams. Life... Love
October 19: Angels With Attitude Book Reviews
October 20: The Avid Reader
October 23: Jazzy Book Reviews
October 24: Readeropolis
October 25: Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer
October 26: Rainy Day Reviews - promo
October 27: Mixed Book Bag
October 30: Christine Young
October 31: Harlie's Books
November 1: Dina Rae's Write Stuff
November 2: T's Stuff
November 3: Sea's Fire
No comments:
Post a Comment