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The Promise of the Pelican, (Arcade, distributed by Simon & Schuster), is an intergenerational, multicultural South, literary crime novel set on the Alabama coast, with back stories in Amsterdam and Central America. An 82-year old retired defense attorney, Hank Weinberg, a child Holocaust survivor from Amsterdam, is summoned back into action to take up the cause of a young Honduran worker at a local resort hotel, accused of a murder. “The Promise of the Pelican” is not only a crime novel, but also a novel that’s Jewish, Southern, global, and attuned to issues of social justice.
Roy Hoffman is author of the new novel The Promise of the Pelican, a literary crime novel of today’s multicultural South, the novels Come Landfall, Chicken Dreaming Corn, praised by Harper Lee, and Almost Family, and the nonfiction Alabama Afternoons and Back Home. His essays have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall St. Journal, and he was a journalist and speechwriter in New York before returning south to reside in Fairhope, Ala., near his hometown, Mobile. A recipient of the Lillian Smith Award in fiction and Clarence Cason Award in nonfiction, Roy is on the faculty of Spalding University’s Naslund-Mann Graduate School of Writing. On the web: www.royhoffmanwriter.com
Mallory McDuff teaches environmental education at Warren Wilson College outside Asheville, North Carolina. With her two daughters, she lives on campus in a 900-square-foot house with an expansive view of the Appalachian mountains. She is the author of four books, including Natural Saints: How People of Faith Are Working to Save God’s Earth. Her essays have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Rumpus, Sojourners, and more.
