

Read CAMP OLVIDO, a masterful work of fiction, as provocative as it is jaw-dropping in its beauty." Wendell Mayo "In CAMP OLVIDO, Lawrence Coates paints a sensual and humane picture of life and death in a depression-era work camp peopled by Latino fieldworkers. A superb addition to a distinguished series." Cary Holladay "I have rarely read a novella so rich, with the moral complexities of Melville's Billy Budd and the social and visual acuity of a film like Bunuel's Los olvidados. Gorgeously written, the novella shows the dark side of California's prosperity, with violence and, unexpectedly, elements of the divine. Lawrence Coates writes with every bit as much tenderness and compassion, but this moving novella full of characters I won't forget and images I can't is cut with a clear-eyed, brutal honesty that gives it a hard-won wisdom and beauty all its own." Josh Weil " A] stunning exploration of one man's bold actions and their consequences. I haven't read anything as powerful about pickers and California since I read John Steinbeck.

"CAMP OLVIDO is everything a novella should be intense as it is resonant, propulsive as it is deep but, even more than a shining example of the form, it is simply a great story. Into this dispute Esteban Alas contrabandista and self- styled businessman is reluctantly drawn as a mediator, until an act of violence forces him into a more tragic role. In the California heartland in 1932, at a migrant labor camp whose very name means forgotten, a child's sudden illness leads to tensions between workers wishing to break camp and the land barons enforcing their contracts.
