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The Border by Don Winslow

What's It About?

Keller sees the child and the glint of the scope in the same moment.
So begins The Border (William Morrow), Rhode Island native Don Winslow’s long-awaited, brilliant and bracing concluding chapter to the trilogy that began twenty years ago with The Power of the Dog and continued much more recently with The Cartel. The great thing about that opening line is that it foreshadows Winslow’s wondrous motif of continually juxtaposing images, emotions, and actions. These brilliant contrasts define the essence of what for my money is the best book in the series, as well as an instant classic.
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No fiction writer has ever owned a subject, a kind of first and final word, the way Winslow owns the war on drugs. And his world-weary hero Art Keller, who’s been fighting that war for twice as long as the series’ duration, is the DEA’s ubermensch, the man charged with leading an existential quest against those who put the value of human life at absolute zero. In The Border his chief antagonist comes in the form once again of Adan Barrera an El Chapo-like cartel head for whom brutality is first nature, never mind second. Keller still bears the scars of their previous encounters that have cost him pretty much everything that’s dear to him, the one exception being winning the war others have deserted or never bothered to fight at all. “The adrenaline from the gunfight that started before dawn has dropped, and now he feels the sun and the close heat of the rain forest. His legs ache, his eyes hurt, the stench of flame, smoke and death sticks in his nose. The smell of burning flesh never leaves you.” That’s more or less typical of the hard-edged, first-person, present-tense prose that brands The Border as an exquisite exercise in post-modern noir. But Winslow’s superbly staccato style is matched every step of the way by enough substance for a trilogy all by itself. Keller is head of the Drug Enforcement Administration now, a position from which you’d think he’d be able to vanquish the sinister Barrera once and for all. That is until a pair of smarmy, potentially White House bound opportunists work at every juncture to short circuit Keller’s efforts to win a war many clearly don’t want to be fought. This obstacle sets Keller alone on his quest to save the kingdom by vanquishing the fire-breathing dragon with a gut full of gasoline at any and all costs. In this sense, he is the classic hero, as much Odysseus from The Iliad and The Odyssey or John McClane from “Die Hard,”a man whose mission is defined by its very hopelessness.

The Border checks all the boxes, including a villainous sidekick who could teach the likes of Anton Chigurh, from No Country for Old Men, something. There are femme fatales, weak-kneed foils, double-dealing cops, and victimized civilians—all populating a tapestry as rich and vibrant as it is sprawling. This is a modern masterpiece of rare depth and pathos, an epic destined to be the defining tome of an age that has given us the opioid crisis and a never-ending battle over a border wall. A thriller extraordinaire and also, quite likely, the best novel of 2019.

The Border is now available to purchase.

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The Border by Don Winslow
Genre: Thrillers
Author: Don Winslow
Publisher: William Morrow
ISBN: 9780062664500
Jon Land

Jon Land is the bestselling author over 25 novels. He graduated from Brown University in 1979 Phi Beta Kappa and Magna cum Laude and continues his association with Brown as an alumni advisor. Jon often bases his novels and scripts on extensive travel and research as well as a twenty-five year career in martial arts. He is an associate member of the US Special Forces and frequently volunteers in schools to help young people learn to enjoy the process of writing. Jon is the Vice-President of marketing of the International Thriller Writers (ITW) and is often asked to speak on topics regarding writing and research. In addition to writing suspense/thrillers, Jon is also a screenwriter with his first film credit in 2005. Jon works with many industry professionals and has garnered the respect and friendship of many author-colleagues. He loves storytelling in all its forms. Jon currently lives in Providence, Rhode Island and loves hearing from his readers and aspiring writers.

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