The Knife: A Novel
By (Author) Ross Ritchel
Penguin Putnam Inc
Plume
15th January 2017
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
272
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
218g
It's hot and getting hotter this summer in Afghanipakiraqistan - the preferred name for the ambiguous stretch of the world where the U.S. Special Forces operate with little outside attention. Team Leader Dutch Shaw is missing his late grandmother, but there's no time to mourn. After two helicopters in a sister squadron are shot down, Shaw and his team know that they're going to be spun up and sent back in, deep into insurgent territory, where a mysterious new organization called Al Ayeelaa has been attracting high-value targets from across the region.
Army veteran Ross Ritchells debut novel, The Knife, cuts deep to the core of modern warfare, in all its complexity and moral ambiguityA gripping page-turner. New York Daily News
The National Book Award went to Phil Klay, a writer who used his experiences as a veteran in his fictionbut now a new writer, also a veteran, is giving Klay a run for his money...Ross Ritchells THE KNIFE..reminiscent of Tim OBriens Vietnam novel,The Things They Carried. its the best novel yet about life at the point of the knife, in these times of overlapping foreign wars.
--Alan Cheuse, National Public Radio's "All Things Considered"
In 2014, the short stories in Phil Klays Redeployment were heralded as some of the most authentic wartime writing in our ever-changing post-9/11 world. In 2015, The Knife, another literary masterpiece, deserves the same praise for its portrayal of valor and the horrors of war...Ritchell, a former soldier who participated in classified special operations missions in the Middle East and now lives in Evanston, uses personal experience to write a novel that paints war as a complicated, exhausting, gut-wrenching ordeal. It gives Ritchells story a richly personal and organic sensibility.Chicago Tribune
"Ritchell, a former special operations soldier, explores both the macho swagger of these hardened soldiers and their more introspective moments in an almost journal-like manner...while not short of action scenes, the novel is at its best when it probes the soldiers misgivings about the job theyre asked to do and the fine line between killing enemy combatants and murder that can exist in a battle zone where civilians and soldiers are intermingled. A simultaneously tough and thoughtful work." Library Journal
"Raw, authentic and deeply moving, this is a stunning debut."Rene Denfeld, author ofThe Enchanted
"The most gripping and thought-provoking novel I've read this year,The Knifewill enchant, move, and haunt its readers. Ross Ritchell's gritty prose is stunning, and his painfully human characters linger in the mind.The Knifeis a powerful meditation on war and man, told by a remarkably gifted novelist." Michael Koryta,New York Timesbestselling author
Former Army Ranger and combat veteran Ritchell delivers a war story about the mind-numbing periods of waiting, the stress of battle fatigue, the ingeniously idiotic ideas that fill downtime and the spine-tingling moments when life is ever so fragile...Ritchell describes night operations, "snatch and grab"s and the elimination of HVTs (High Value Targets) without false bravado, while still broadcasting the immense skill possessed by these soldiers. He draws the high drama and moral complexity of the Rangers' life on the front lines from a place of narrative distance, allowing the reader to fill in the unstated emotions of Shaw and his team, giving their story great poignancy. A beautiful book about the soldiers who sit on the front lines of the U.S. military machine.Kirkus
"Ross Ritchell has written a compellingly authentic debut novel.Its uniquely haunting effect arises in part from a dissonance between the clarity of both its action and the immediacy of its telegraphic prose, and yet, at the same time theres a convincing sense of disassociation, a shadow of shocked, repressed emotion."Stuart Dybek, author ofThe Coast of Chicago
The Knife is intimate immersion in a squad of soldiers in a war zone. It is funny, disgusting, warm and terrifying, by turns or all at once. It is beautiful. Honest. Heart breaking.
Katherine Dunn, author ofGeek Love
Ross Ritchell is a former soldier in a United States Special Operations Command direct-action team conducting classified operations in the Middle East. Upon his discharge, he enrolled at Northwestern University, where he earned an MFA. He lives with his family in Illinois.