Pushcart Prize Nominee, Thierry Sagnier Launches Promotional Tours For Two Different, But Similar Novels Thirst, and L’Amérique

Both books share an archetypal story of the power of friendship, and our overwhelming human urge to survive.

But that’s where the similarities end. Thirst is a gritty, twisting, crime thriller set in modern day Washington, DC, and L’Amérique is a historical novel set in post WWII, that tells the coming of age story of a young French boy newly immigrated to America with his parents.

“I’m an immigrant, and I worked for years as an addiction counselor. Immigrants, like people struggling with addiction, fight to fit in, and to survive in what is often a hostile environment. The plots and characters are widely different in Thirst and L’Amérique, but their themes are similar,” Sagnier says.

About L’Amérique
Set in Paris shortly after World War II, L’Amérique recounts the fortitude of one Parisian family in a nation humiliated by defeat and torn by recriminations. It is above all the story of Jeanot, a boy raised by disparate people in a middle-class apartment building, and the journey that will take him to L’Amérique, where dreams come true, but rarely as expected.
Jeanot’s world is peopled by his great aunt Tatie, who sleeps with her hat on, her detestable maid Guénolé, and Kharkov, the building’s White Russian concierge. And then there are his extraordinary friends, Dédé and Babette in Paris, and KC and Robert in America.
L’Amérique is a story of growing up in a country with little to offer its people, and of coming of age in a strange mythical land of too many promises.

L’Amérique is available on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/LAmerique-Novel-Thierry-Sagnier-ebook/dp/B07GMB3CL2

Sagnier is at work on two sequels to L’Amérique. The complete works will form a trilogy, the first two published by Apprentice House Press at Loyola University Maryland. The second book in the series, Montparnasse set in Paris 1919, will be published in 2019 

About Thirst
A fortune in drugs is missing. Finding them starts with finding her. Colin isn’t a cop. Mamadou was an excellent police officer back in Senegal, but in Washington DC he drives a limo. Josie’s just a girl—a recovering crack addict fed up with Herbie, her boyfriend. But Herbie stole a shipment of drugs, and now he’s dead. And let’s not forget Mollie Catfish who wants it all… Now the Zulu wants his drugs, Mamadou wants revenge, and Colin wants to save his girlfriend’s daughter. All Josie wants is to remember what Herbie might have told her, what the Zulu insists she knows. If she doesn’t—she’s dead too. Behind the polished marble of Washington DC, lies dark alleys where everyone thirsts for something.
Thirst is available on Amazon in eBook and softcover print at https://www.amazon.com/Thirst-Thierry-Sagnier-ebook/dp/B00UG9EHXQ

Two more books – Dope, and Sin – are planned in this series. Dope will be available in 2020 and Sin will be published in 2021

“Sagnier builds characters as solid, gritty, and as broken as a DC street, with prose that lights up like monuments on a starry night.” — Michael J. Sullivan, best-selling author of The Riyria Revelations

About the Author Thierry Sagnier
Thierry Sagnier is a writer and Pushcart Prize Nominee whose works have been published both in the United States and abroad. He is the author of The IFO Report, (Avon Books), Bike! Motorcycles and the People who Ride Them (Harper & Row) and Washington by Night (Washingtonian Books). His short story, Lunch with the General published in Chrysalis Reader, was nominated for a 2013 Pushcart Prize, an American literary prize by Pushcart Press that honors the best “poetry, short fiction, essays or literary whatnot published in the small presses.” He is also the author of two online works published by Pigasus Books. In 2016, The Fortunate Few was published by ICAM Press. L’Amérique, a coming of age novel, was published by Apprentice Press of Baltimore in October 2018.
Thirst is a thriller based in Washington, DC’s mean streets.

Writing about People, Places and Things is a collection of essays chronicling Sagnier’s thoughts on writing, family and friendships, and his bout with cancer. Montparnasse, a novel set in Paris in 1919 will be published in 2019, as will Dope, a sequel to Thirst.

Thierry Sagnier was born in France and came to the United States in his early teens. He has worked and written for The Washington Post and several other newspapers and magazines, produced videos and short films for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and was a columnist for Canada’s Le Devoir.

Thierry also writes Epiphanettes, and short stories which he shares with his fans through his website at https://www.sagnier.com/