Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Don Winslow

Don Winslow's The Border (forthcoming, February 2019) is a follow-up to his 2005 novel The Power of the Dog and 2015’s The Cartel. From the author's Entertainment Weekly Q&A:

[T]he title of the book — The Border — is a politically loaded phrase. And the cover shows a wall topped with razor wire. Why did you choose that for the name?

I chose that title because that’s what the story is about. Drug trafficking is about the border, immigration is about the border, the political conflict is about the border.

That’s the physical border, an external border, but the book is also about how every character confronts moral and emotional borders inside themselves, whether they choose to cross them or not, and, if they do, whether they can make it back.

Are you concerned about anyone misinterpreting your intention?

I understand that it’s a politically loaded phrase. But loaded phrases, like loaded guns, are more interesting, aren’t they? They certainly contain more threat. I never worry about anyone misinterpreting my intentions. My intentions in this book are pretty clear, but I think that each reader has a perfect right to his or her interpretation.

I know this book is going to make some people angry. I can...[read on]
Learn about Winslow's hero from outside literature.

--Marshal Zeringue