“In my family, it was as if you had to be dead to get noticed,” says 16-year-old Hailey, the protagonist of Chris Tusa’s Dirty Little Angels. Early in the novel, Hailey tells us that her mother has pictures of Jesus and an ultrasound of her miscarried youngest child on her dresser, but no pictures of her living family members.
Hailey quickly brings us into her New Orleans, one that’s rarely seen by tourists—rough, poor and violent. Caught up in her mother’s lack of attention, her father’s failings, her brother Cyrus’s dangerous tendencies, and the casual viciousness of her best friend, Meridian, Hailey is drowning. She longs for relief but never genuinely looks for an escape.
She’s too busy pondering the faith of those around her and whether God exists. She’s too caught up in Cyrus’s violence and Meridian’s explorations of sex and manipulation to dream of a different life for herself. But as Cyrus and Hailey start spending more time with Moses, an ex-con who... Dirty Little Angels Reviewed in 225
“In my family, it was as if you had to be dead to get noticed,” says 16-year-old Hailey, the protagonist of Chris Tusa’s Dirty Little Angels. Early in the novel, Hailey tells us that her mother has pictures of Jesus and an ultrasound of her miscarried youngest child on her dresser, but no pictures of her living family members.
Hailey quickly brings us into her New Orleans, one that’s rarely seen by tourists—rough, poor and violent. Caught up in her mother’s lack of attention, her father’s failings, her brother Cyrus’s dangerous tendencies, and the casual viciousness of her best friend, Meridian, Hailey is drowning. She longs for relief but never genuinely looks for an escape.
She’s too busy pondering the faith of those around her and whether God exists. She’s too caught up in Cyrus’s violence and Meridian’s explorations of sex and manipulation to dream of a different life for herself. But as Cyrus and Hailey start spending more time with Moses, an ex-con who... Interview (from Burnt Bridge)
We had the chance to shoot the bull with Chris Tusa this past spring at a writer’s conference in lovely Fairhope, Alabama (you should go, if you haven’t been). We were captured by the bleakness so readily apparent on the cover of his debut novel, Dirty Little Angels. We like grim, morose, and desperation, and not to mention Cajun food and hurricane aftermath (we live there, too). So, we dug in and got dirty with Chris and his angels. Here follows that quagmire:
To read the entire interview, point your browser to the link... Interview on WRBH (New Orleans)
WRBH hosts several shows in the studio including Writers Forum, which provides an opportunity for local authors to discuss their work, and The Chef Show, moderated by Mary Sonnier, former co-owner of Gabrielle Restaurant. More recently, the station has partnered with the Vietnamese and the growing Spanish-speaking communities of New Orleans in order to provide these populations with quality programming. They were kind enough to invite me down to their studio for an interview (as part of Writers Forum) back in 2009 when Dirty Little Angels was released. Click here to listen to the...







Reading at Baldwin-Wallace College