PRO CONNECT
TOM HOGAN PROFILE
From archaeological digs in Israel to life in both Protestant and Catholic seminaries to launching tech startups in Silicon Valley, Tom Hogan has led a fascinating life. And he brings that richness of experience to his writing, both fiction and non-fiction.
Archaeology: Undergraduate and graduate work in Biblical History and Archaeology led Tom to become a ceramic specialist on digs in Israel, dating strata (levels of civilization) by the type and quality of ceramic shards discovered there. That led to work at the Harvard Semitic Museum, where he worked with the team deciphering the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The Holocaust: Funded by a grant from the National Conference for Community and Justice, Tom developed one of the first programs for introducing the Holocaust into high school and university curricula. He then became a lecturer in Holocaust Studies at Santa Clara University. In 2000 he took a five-year sabbatical from his work in tech marketing (below) to become an associate professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at UC Santa Cruz.
Technology Marketing: Tom joined Oracle in its early days as the company’s first Creative Director, developing the marketing programs (including ORACLE Magazine and Oracle Open World) that distinguished the company in its early days. He eventually migrated to the VC (Venture Capital) world as the founder of Crowded Ocean, a small agency that specialized in launching startups. Crowded Ocean has launched 51 startups, with 17 of them going public or being acquired, a remarkable 33% success rate in an industry where 10% is considered great.
Writing: While doing his graduate work in Biblical Archaeology at Harvard, his novel (which later became What the Hell) was selected by the Nieman Foundation for sponsorship, which included being coached by Ann Beattie. Over the years he wrote for a number of political and travel journals, including an article for Newsweek about pedophilia in the Catholic Church. In 2018 he retired from Silicon Valley and moved to Austin to write full-time.
“Hogan deftly presents the heinous, historical truths of Auschwitz within the fictional realm of his story—a delicate balance that he achieves with intelligent, thoughtful prose.
An evocative work of fiction rooted in one of the darkest eras of history.”
– Kirkus Reviews
In Hogan’s latest novel, a conflicted priest takes God’s justice into his own hands.
Pittsburgh, 2000. Gabe Russell isn’t your average Catholic priest. At 26, he’s one of the youngest priests in the country to have a parish of his own. The teens love his sermons. He practices Krav Maga. In his spare time, he’s working on a novel with the help of Michelle Carlisle, the writing instructor he met while still in the seminary. Michelle is married, but a strong attachment has formed between the two of them—and it seems to be about more than just Gabe’s engaging fiction. Michelle isn’t the only one making Gabe question his role as pastor, however. Behind the scenes, his archdiocese is covering up for pedophilic priests, and Gabe’s flock is starting to demand answers. “Our jobs require our parishioners’ trust in the Church and in us as its representative,” Gabe tells the small group of fellow clergy he meets with regularly for drinks. “And in the case of pedophilia, if they find they can’t trust the Church, then they have to at least be able to trust me.” With that in mind, Gabe launches a quiet investigation, with the help of another priest, of the bad priests of Pittsburgh, a quest that brings him into contact with the dogged police detective Carla Jessup. But is Gabe’s crusade against the sinful priests—which quickly lurches into violence—just a way of atoning for his own sinful nature? Hogan’s muscular prose makes for easy reading, as here where Gabe grows frustrated after several rounds of confession: “An hour later, he heard the door close as his last parishioner exited the confessional. Checking his watch, he saw he had time for a light Krav Maga workout before catching the Pirates game at one of the bars where they knew him, but not as a priest.” Despite some of the action-movie elements—which never feel quite real—the novel sincerely grapples with many of the tensions of modern Catholicism. It’s perhaps an imperfect vessel for these ideas, and its odd blend of genres (and Bible jokes) might not find a wide audience, but the reading experience is an unexpectedly engaging one.
A flawed but memorable novel about a vigilante priest.
Pub Date: May 31, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-73694-363-2
Page count: 296pp
Publisher: Laughing Dog Publishing LLC
Review Posted Online: Nov. 2, 2022
A riveting story of survival, set during the Holocaust.
In 1943, Nazis invade a Jewish settlement in Poland and arrest two leading members of the resistance. The couple, Perla and Shimon Divko, an investigative reporter and former detective for the Warsaw Police, respectively, are transported to Auschwitz. Once there, they’re separated and try their best to survive as prisoners. Perla attempts to document and archive the experiences of those in the camp before becoming a typist for Nazi guard Gisela Brandt, and Shimon finds ways to slightly improve the conditions of his crew in the munitions factory. One day, however, the chief accountant at Auschwitz is found dead and a ledger goes missing from a safe. It turns out that the camp commander, Rudolf Hoss, was making his own gold ingots at the camp—stolen from the prisoners’ possessions, including dental fillings—which have now gone missing, as well. Worried that his operation will be found out, Hoss demands that Perla and Shimon assist him in to tracking down the ledger, the gold, and the murderer. Hogan’s prose is gripping as well as informative about its characters, as when Perla begins working as a recording clerk at the camp: “At first the numbers and their significance had overwhelmed her because she realized that each entry marked the end of a life…she had resolved to remember the lives behind the numbers….It was a resolution that lasted the better part of a month before the numbers overwhelmed her intentions.” Along with the primary plot of the missing ingots and ledger, Hogan also effectively details the grim daily aspects of life in the death camp—from the lack of food to prisoners’ tips for survival. Although the story of the investigation is certainly engaging, it’s also brutal; the author never sugarcoats the horrors of the camp. He deftly presents the heinous, historical truths of Auschwitz within the fictional realm of his story—a delicate balance that Hogan achieves with intelligent, thoughtful prose.
An evocative work of fiction rooted in one of the darkest eras of history.
Pub Date: July 30, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-73694-361-8
Page count: 274pp
Publisher: Self
Review Posted Online: Sept. 15, 2021
Favorite author
Elmore Leonard
Hometown
Redlands, CA
THE DEVIL'S BREATH: Semi-finalist: Austin Film Festival, 2018
THE DEVIL'S BREATH: Finalist: Napa Valley Film Festival, 2017
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