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Dia De Los Muertos by Kent A. Harrington
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Dia De Los Muertos (edition 2004)

by Kent A. Harrington

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494525,948 (4.08)None
Border towns stand like carnival funhouse mirrors, reflecting greed, evil, and death in both directions. Not many American writers have looked as deeply into those mirrors as Kent Harrington. DEA Agent Vincent Calhoun's luck, his suerte, has been golden. He and his crooked judicale partner are getting rich coyoteing wealthy crooks and refugees into the U.S. from their posts in Tijuana. Then, on the Day of the Dead, Dia de los Muertos, a girl gets off a bus, and Calhoun's luck heads south with a vengeance. A rolling nightmare of gambling debts, kinky sex, dengue fever, hot lead, and past sins catches up to Vincent Calhoun in a brutal punch-in-the-mouth story set in a moral no-man's land.… (more)
Member:hackryder
Title:Dia De Los Muertos
Authors:Kent A. Harrington
Info:Capra Press (2004), Paperback, 250 pages
Collections:Your library
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Día de los Muertos by Kent Harrington

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Showing 4 of 4
Oh my … I think Harrington is a talented writer who can craft a hard-boiled crime novel. This book focuses on Vincent Calhoun, a DEA agent working in Tijuana, Mexico, who has given in to gambling and corruption. The entire story takes place in about 30 hours, beginning on Nov 1 at 2:00 pm, and ending just short of midnight on the night of Nov 2. In that time frame Harrington manages to cram in several shootings, car chases through the desert, ambushes, drug trafficking, animal doping, loan sharking, kinky sex and even a grossly obese billionaire who is wheeled on a refrigerator dolly through back streets full of drunken revelers. Really? The characters might have been interesting, but as written they were about as flat as the desert landscape. With the exception of a young Guatemalan couple who make just a cameo appearance, I just didn’t care what happened to any of them. What really turned me off, though, was extensive gratuitous sex and violence. It seemed that every time Harrington wrote his character into a jam the way out was either through f**king or killing. He may have the talent to write crime novels, but he wasted it on this drivel. ( )
  BookConcierge | Jan 13, 2016 |
Vincent Calhoun is sick with dengue fever. He is sick to his very soul, betraying his country, his oath as a DEA agent, and his "clients." Calhoun is an American drug agent working in Tijuana, indulging in the excesses and corruption of that Mexican border town. He supplements his income - and tries to to cover his losses at the dog track - by smuggling illegal aliens across the border into California. His partner of choice is a Mexican federal cop. His partner of necessity is a well-bred, young, violent British fixer. The pressure on Calhoun mounts as he's "hired" to mule a group of Chinese girls across the border; unknown to him the girls have ingested balloons of heroin. He reunites with an American girl who started his downward spiral in California, pledging to get her back across the border along with a Chilean family and a 500 lb. Mexican crime lord. Everything comes to a head on Mexico's Dia de los Muertes - the Day of the Dead.

In some all too obvious ways, this classic novel noir reminded me of Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil." A central character has no idea of the forces that are leading him. There is ambition, money, lust, and violence. But, unlike Charlton Heston's film character of Mike Vargas, there is no character with a moral center. Calhoun is more like a younger, handsome version of Welles' character, Hank Quinlan. Calhoun has opportunities to get his life straight, but his physical and moral sickness keep him spiraling down to a violent climax.

La Dia de los Muertes is a fast-moving book that rises above the level of pulp, full of fleshed-out colorful characters who populate a continuum of amorality. I enjoyed this book a lot, but felt like taking a shower after I finished it to wash away the sights, smells, and sounds of Tijuana and the denizens of this novel. ( )
  fromkin | Feb 12, 2012 |
Excellent story from an underappreciated author. ( )
  jastbrown | Jan 19, 2009 |
Vincent Calhoun is a DEA agent stationed in Tijuana with a major gambling problem. Aided by his partner Castro, a corrupt Mexican judicale, he supplements his income as a coyote, smuggling very wealthy people across the border. On the Day of the Dead he is shocked when a woman gets off a prison bus and he recognizes her from his past, a past not very pleasant. His luck begins to leave him: debts he can't pay; a time limit rapidly running out; a smuggling commission he really doesn't want to carry out. Regarding the reluctant commission, Harrington came up with one of the most grotesque and repulsive characters I've encountered in a while.

Harrington's portrayal of Calhoun's disintegration is a beautiful piece of writing.His inner torment is movingly and painfully captured.

Dennis McMillan Publications specializes in limited first editions of noir and hard-boiled fiction. I think they limit their runs to one to two thousand copies and place them mainly in independent book stores.
  malundy | Oct 18, 2008 |
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Border towns stand like carnival funhouse mirrors, reflecting greed, evil, and death in both directions. Not many American writers have looked as deeply into those mirrors as Kent Harrington. DEA Agent Vincent Calhoun's luck, his suerte, has been golden. He and his crooked judicale partner are getting rich coyoteing wealthy crooks and refugees into the U.S. from their posts in Tijuana. Then, on the Day of the Dead, Dia de los Muertos, a girl gets off a bus, and Calhoun's luck heads south with a vengeance. A rolling nightmare of gambling debts, kinky sex, dengue fever, hot lead, and past sins catches up to Vincent Calhoun in a brutal punch-in-the-mouth story set in a moral no-man's land.

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