From 21-Jump Street writer and series creator Patrick Hasburgh, a part thriller, part family novel about an ex-pat American living and surfing in Mexico, the family he loves, and the murder he witnesses, in the vein of Don Winslowâs The Dawn Patrol.
âItâs rare to find a novel thatâs so harrowing, funny and touching at the same time, but Patrick Hasburgh somehow pulls it off. His surf-bum narrator is a new classicâthink of Philip Marlowe, on a longboard.â âCarl Hiaasen, New York Times bestselling author of Razor Girl
âFueled by equal parts humor and suspense, Pirata makes for a fast and satisfying read.â â Kem Nunn, author of National Book Award Finalist Tapping the Source
""Going straight at the stuff that scares you is good advice. I just didnât have the courage to do itâŠââNick Lutz
In a former life, Nick Lutz, sold cars in the Golden State. He had a wife and a young son, and they struggled along until Nick was shot in the head when a potential customer hijacked the car he was demonstrating. The incident sets off a bad-luck domino fall, and he loses an eye, his job, his family, and, eventually, his self-respect.
With nothing left, Nick heads for Mexico, where he sheds his former self among an eclectic group of expats and locals, who fondly name him âPirataâ on account of his eye patch. There on the beaches of Sabanita, Nick and his buddy Winsor drink, surf, andâmost of allâescape, buoyed away from their pasts on south swells and Tecate. Nothing epic. That is until Winsorâs girlfriend, Meagan, ends their abusive relationship and flees with her two boys to the safety and solace of Nickâs beachside casita. A monsoon season fling of convenience turns into a torrid love affair as new loyalties and dark secrets are shaped into something like a family. But when the local policĂa struggle to identify a body that has washed up in the surf, Nick realizes his secretsâand sinsâhave caught up with him. And there are dangerous new surprises that have yet to roll in with the tide. . . .
A gifted storyteller, Hasburgh drops readers into the middle of a gripping, heartwarming, viscerally compelling page turner. At once tender and deadly hysterical, Pirata is a novel readers wonât soon forget.