Sleeping With Pancho Villa | Rick Skwiot
Finalist for the Willa Cather Prize.
“A thoughtfully layered backdrop of Mexican culture…impressively crafted labyrinthine setting…Snappy and often funny dialogue.”–Publisher’s Weekly
“Life in a Mexican town…laid out beautifully …A skillfully written portrait of an entire community. Highly recommended.” –Library Journal
“This book alone heralds the arrival of a great new writer.” –The Colorado Springs Independent
From Publishers Weekly
From Library Journal
Skwiot, who won the Hemingway First Novel Prize for Flesh (First Edition, Eaton Street, 1998. Second Edition, Antaeus Books®), here brings us life in a Mexican border town, with a collection of residents, visitors, and events from their lives laid out beautifully in a novel that was runner-up for the 1996 Willa Cather Fiction Award. A Vietnam veteran, a policeman in this sleepy town, has two wives with children on either side of the border and manages to maintain relationships with both. Meanwhile, Jake, an American writer, falls in love with the beautiful Mexican Marta. When Marta’s fiance, Pancho, is murdered, and an American woman in love with Jake commits suicide, Marta and Jake share love and are haunted by the two frustrated ghosts. The haunting can only end when the spirits are wed by a priest. Skwiot manages to organize these and other individuals and plots into a skillfully written portrait of an entire community. Highly recommended. Carolyn Ellis Gonzalez, Univ. of Texas at San Antonio.
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Read an excerpt from Sleeping With Pancho Villa by Rick Skwiot