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Mutt

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When Patrick, a White/Korean mutt who can pass for Latino, moves to a new town, he falls for Krystal, a seductive, fast-talking Mexican girl. Believing him to be Mexican, she invites Patrick to a party hosted by Los Reyes Locos, the reigning local gang. Little does Patrick know he’s been recruited. He survives the beating/initiation and is branded in blood and ink into the family, with “El Rey,” the god-like leader, calling the shots. El Rey's means of teaching him the ropes the next day consists of Patrick bearing witness to murder and gang rape. Fearing for his life and already in too deep in his lies, his only way out is to fight with bloodied fists for the crown. A fast-paced action/suspense story right off the first page, Mutt’s protagonist takes us on a masochistic ride in his quest for love and ultimately, survival.

112 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 4, 2015

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Shane McKenzie

84 books230 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Marvin.
1,414 reviews5,409 followers
July 14, 2015
In Shane McKenzie's tense and different novella Mutt, Patrick, a young white/Korean male who is often mistaken as Mexican, lives with his mother, works at a boxing gym cleaning up, and basically stays out of trouble. That is until he meets a Mexican girl who mistakes him as being the same as her. Pat is too smitten with desire to correct her and finds himself taken to a party by the local gang Los Reyes Locos. When he discovers he has been "drafted" into joining, it is too late and he is neck deep in a lifestyle he doesn't want with a girl he cannot resist. Soon, he must fight his way out to save himself and his family.

McKenzie's writing is very visceral. As in his previous work, Muerte Con Carne, there is plenty of action and violence. Yet while Muertes Con Carne is clearly a horror tale, Mutt is closer to a suspense and crime tale and throws in a lot of human drama into its characters' development and emotions. Patrick is mixed race but is frequently mistaken as Mexican. Patrick is based on the author's own situation and speaks of his own dilemma as being judged as someone he is not. While the author is taking his queues from his own life, I am fairly certain the actual plot is not auto-biographical or at least I hope not! The fictional Patrick's situation is extreme but it works as an illustration of one of our own inescapable issues in our American life; being judged on appearance and race rather than for who we really are. Mutt is just as much a coming-of-age tale about growing up in race and class torn America as it is an edge of your seat thriller about gangs and violence.

That is why this book and the main character of Patrick moved me so much. Patrick is a normal kid who wants to be accepted and wants the girl. He is tricked into a lifestyle he does not want for a girl who may have other plans for him. In the midst of this plot we have great writing that brings Patrick and the gang of Los Reyes Locos to life. There is no sugar coating. Patrick is sleeping with cobras and he knows it. The scenes of violence are intense but fits squarely into the story and we see Patrick's own terror and bewilderment as he experiences it.

It is that part of McKenzie's writing that senses the horror of life choices when it collides with the human-created horrors of society that makes me come back to his stories. Whether it is cannibal families as in Muerte Con Carne or homicidal gangs as in Mutt, the author goes deeper than the suspense and visceral thrills inherent in the tale and digs into the existential dread that one will find themselves in. I hope the author continues this exploration of the human side of dark social and racial themes in future stories. Even if he decides to just thrill and terrorize us I will be pleased. He does it so well. But he has the gift of social observation that does not ignore the individual psyche and I hope he uses it again.

Profile Image for L J Field.
609 reviews17 followers
August 5, 2024
Excellent gang novel. Patrick is attracted to a Hispanic girl. Unknown to him, she is a recruiter for Los Reyes Locos, a Mexican gang. She becomes friendly with Patrick and invites him to a party. This party is held for the admission of new gang members, something that Patrick doesn’t know. Here the action starts. This is a bloody story.
Profile Image for Douglas Castagna.
Author 9 books17 followers
November 23, 2015
Mutt is now one of my favorite McKenzie books. Not sure it was possible to top Muerte or Wet and Screaming, but he manages to bring us an all too real story about fitting in, lies of omission, and the consequences these things can bring. Hard hitting, and visceral, the pages bleed with description and realism. Mutt is a must read.
Profile Image for Russell Coy.
Author 3 books19 followers
May 16, 2016
I really dug this urban noir tale from McKenzie, better known for his extreme horror/Bizarro work. You can usually expect a good deal of gore and grit from this guy, but there's also a big, beating heart that runs through his stories. There's all of that in MUTT, too, showing he can write just fine without cannibal Luchadores and meat-walled houses, welcome as those always are.

4 stars
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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