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THE SEARCH COMMITTEE by José Skinner

THE SEARCH COMMITTEE

by José Skinner

Pub Date: March 31st, 2025
ISBN: 9798893750072
Publisher: Arte Público

In Skinner’s thriller, a candidate for an academic position in a Texas border town is kidnapped in Mexico.

William Quigley is an assistant professor at Bravo University, which is located just a few miles from the Texas-Mexico border. Tasked with escorting job candidate Minerva Mondragón during her on-campus job interview, Quigley’s eagerness to impress leads him to make a series of decisions that spiral out of control. Quigley picks up Mondragón at the airport and attempts to charm her with references to Graham Greene (“Just look at that terminal—tropical ramshackle. Total Greeneland!”). She suggests crossing the border for lunch in Mexico, and he agrees, even though he has misgivings. Minerva vanishes during the meal, having been abducted while searching for the restroom. Quigley returns to campus as Minerva tries to escape her captors. Skinner has crafted memorable leads in Quigley and Mondragón, whose stories unfold in alternating chapters. The supporting characters, including bored customs agents and disguised cartel lookouts, add to the narrative’s quirkiness. The novel satirizes academia but also delves into border issues, and though the work can be funny, it doesn’t shy away from the dark side of this subject, including the grim realities of human trafficking and the corruption of law enforcement. What makes the book especially powerful is its mix of tones as Skinner skillfully blends dark humor with dread; the absurdities of academic life—tenure-track interviews, awkward faculty interactions, petty departmental politics—stand in stark contrast to the danger unfolding in Mexico. The narrative remains tense from start to finish, avoiding any predictability or cliche. Skinner depicts the mechanisms of academia with the same gravity as cartel violence, suggesting that both are driven by power, ego, and a dangerous blindness to consequence. The novel’s pacing is energetic, drawing readers in with sharp wit and gradually revealing a much darker undercurrent. This is a novel that lingers after its final page.

A dramatic and often darkly humorous debut thriller.