Calumet Editions

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Mintwood Place

A Novel

Author:

Mintwood Place refreshes noir with a contemporary Casablanca set in Washington, DC. Narrated by Renaissance man Joe Green, it blends romantic suspense with sharp reflections on love, politics, and the male psyche. Running a bookstore and bistro while enduring divorce, Joe is drawn into a Senate Intelligence Committee probe over his bond with Cosmo, an ex-con tied to a disputed killing. Tender father, armed survivor.

an underrated gem

—L Short on Amazon

Description

Mintwood Place is a delightfully fresh version of the noir tradition, offering the reader a contemporary “Casablanca” in Washington, DC. The book’s narrator, Renaissance man Joe Green, has plenty to say about love, politics and the male psyche in this page-turning romantic suspense novel. Joe runs a bookstore and a bistro and painfully navigates a modern divorce while the Senate Intelligence Committee investigates his relationship with Cosmo, a protégé who has recently been paroled after serving five years in prison for the ambiguous killing of a local black youth. Green, a proud Jersey boy, can all at once relax by watching his tortoises, hand out liberal advice to his three teenagers, and pack serious heat. He is a twenty-first-century American male, if ever there was one.

Product Details

PublishedJanuary 2, 2023
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length238
ISBN-139781960250148
Dimensions6 x 0.54 x 9 inches

This is not the kind of book I usually read. I’m partial to high intensity thrillers but Gilbert struck a nerve with me. I pay it high compliment when I say that the book was just damn enjoyable to read.

—Larry Kahaner, verified review on Amazon

Loved this first-person narrative set in DC’s great melting pot neighborhood of Adams Morgan featuring a middle-aged restaurateur and rare book seller who gets mixed up in single parenthood, kinky sex, and international intrigue—all at once.

—Petur S. William, verified review on Amazon

This book is an underrated gem! I loved it, and to be honest, I felt that there were deeper layers and nuances that I potentially missed. It was smart, engaging and had the kind of snappy dialogue that you would expect from those great black and white movies in the 1940s.

—L Short, verified review on Amazon