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Dark Road, Dead End Philip Cioffari |
Publication Date: November 1, 2014 Synopsis: Walter Morrison, working undercover for the U.S. Customs Service, has been in town less than three weeks; but already he’s seen evidence of wildlife smuggling, boatloads of exotic species of birds and mammals ferried in the dead of night through the fast-running streams of the Everglades. And what he’s seen is only part of a vast criminal enterprise that supplies these rare and endangered species nationwide to pet stores, private hunt clubs, wildlife safari parks and even to highly “respectable” municipal zoos. To make matters worse, someone in his own agency has set the clock ticking on what could be the last seventy-two hours of his life. ISBN: 978-1-60489-140-9 Hard cover, $30 Sale $15.00 ISBN: 978-1-60489-141-6 Trade paper, $17.95 Sale $9.00 215 Pages |
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About
the Author:
Philip Cioffari is the author of
three previous books of fiction: the novel, JESUSVILLE:
the mystery/thriller, CATHOLIC BOYS; and the short story
collection, A HISTORY OF THINGS LOST OR BROKEN, which
won the Tartt Fiction Prize, and the D. H. Lawrence
award for fiction. His short stories have been published
widely in commercial and literary magazines and
anthologies, including
North American
Review, Playboy, Michigan Quarterly Review, Northwest
Review,
Florida Fiction, and
Southern
Humanities Review. He has written and directed for
Off and Off-Off Broadway. His Indie feature film, which
he wrote and directed, LOVE IN THE AGE OF DION, has won
numerous awards, including Best Feature Film at the Long
Island Int’l Film Expo, and Best Director at the NY
Independent Film & Video Festival. He is a Professor of
English, and director of the Performing and Literary
Arts Honors Program, at William Paterson University.
www.philipcioffari.com
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Excerpt from the Book: |
MORRISON STOOD ON THE PORCH of the
River Hotel finishing his third whiskey of the evening,
wondering how they would kill him. It would be an
accident, of course. That was the way with agents who
fell out of favor. An unfortunate tragedy of
circumstance, a situation that was unanticipated. That
would be the wording in the letter to the aunt he hadn’t
seen in years. With our deepest regrets. . . . The whiskey had gone sour on his
tongue. Death had never been so real to him. Over the
years he had, of course, attended his share of funerals.
But his own death had remained a nebulous thing, remote
at best, undefined. Until now. The realization that it was
imminent astonished him, as if he’d lived his entire
life without regard for its terms and conditions, its
limited warranty. As if he’d failed to read the small
print of the contract. Farther down the porch, hotel
guests gathered around a piano bar, the maudlin tinkling
music and their chatter of no interest to him now. In
this heat even the smallest gesture was an effort, but
he waved his glass at the waitress coming toward him,
the young perky one—LeeLee or DeeDee—who always offered
him a smile. “Eve-nin’, Mr. M.” Under the yellow porch lights, his
face with its watchful eyes and strong chin seemed on
the verge of discovery. His eyes flicked toward her and
he smiled briefly before looking away. Pretty women
always made him feel he should apologize. For what, he
wasn’t sure. She took his glass and moved toward
the door without breaking stride. He turned now to the river and the
gold disc of the sun suspended above an horizon of slash
pine and palm. Usually he didn’t have his fourth whiskey
until the sun had set and the sky had turned an
iridescent silver. But tonight he didn’t have to wait
for the colors of dusk to unnerve him. When the girl brought his whiskey
he moved to the end of the porch with its view of grey
bungalows and beyond that, beyond the row of trees with
their brush-like blossoms of pink and white, the ball
fields of the high school where a handful of Guatemalan
boys played soccer. Tonight Emilio was not among them,
and he felt as if something necessary had been ripped
from him. The sons of fishermen and migrant workers on
temporary visas, the boys came from the trailer park up
river. Watching them at play had been the solace of his
evenings. On the field, the ball arced high,
the boys’ cries rising in the darkening air. He took
satisfaction in the youthful motion of their bodies,
arms swinging freely, brown legs flashing as they
followed the ball this way and that across the field. At
51 he could still remember what it was like to be young
and he looked back to that time with regret. He wished
he could have been carefree and joyous like these boys. Across the river the swamp grew
darker, a chaos of shadow and night sounds. In a matter
of hours he would be out there, on patrol again, his
nightly ritual. Except that tonight there was a special
shipment coming in. Emilio had alerted him to that. The
anticipation added to his anxiety, sharpened his fear. But first he had to meet with
Caruso. He drained the whiskey and turned back one last
time to watch the boys, ignoring the romantic notes of
the piano and the laughter that drifted dismally in the
air around him. |