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The Albatross Ledger

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Pub Date Aug 05 2026 | Archive Date Jul 04 2026


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Description

Santo Domingo, April 1965. Twenty-three thousand American troops land in the Dominican Republic to stop what Washington has decided is a second Cuba. The intervention will last seventeen months. The methods rehearsed there will travel forward to Saigon.
Dani Piedra is a CIA analyst whose ledger of suspected communists was meant to inform policy. In the hands of men with rifles, it becomes something else. Red Thibodeaux is a Military Police corporal at a checkpoint where the bodies arrive, and the paperwork does not. His logs go up the chain. They do not come back.
Neither man is corrupt. Neither breaks the rules. The machinery around them works exactly as designed, and that is the problem.
Told across three acts, Careful Work, It's Not Enough, and Transferred, The Albatross Ledger traces how an institution credentials its own failures and carries the practice forward to the next war. It is a novel about intelligence, evidence, and the quiet bureaucratic distance between a name on a list and a body in a ditch.
Phillip Daigle served with the 82nd Airborne Division in the Dominican Republic in 1965. The Albatross Ledger is his fifth novel

Santo Domingo, April 1965. Twenty-three thousand American troops land in the Dominican Republic to stop what Washington has decided is a second Cuba. The intervention will last seventeen months. The...

A Note From the Publisher

For readers of Phil Klay's Missionaries and Denis Johnson's Tree of Smoke.
Historical Setting: The 1965 Dominican Republic setting is well-realized and provides a fresh context for a Cold War narrative, moving beyond the more common European settings.
Literary Appeal: The high quality of the prose, the psychological depth of the protagonist, and the sophisticated exploration of moral ambiguity give the novel significant crossover potential into the literary fiction market. It could be positioned as a literary thriller.

For readers of Phil Klay's Missionaries and Denis Johnson's Tree of Smoke.
Historical Setting: The 1965 Dominican Republic setting is well-realized and provides a fresh context for a Cold...


Advance Praise

"A powerful and moving chronicle of an invasion the US has forgotten and the lives (and the countries) it made and broke."

JUNOT DÍAZ, AUTHOR OF THE BRIEF WONDROUS LIFE OF OSCAR WAO

The 1965 U.S. intervention in the Dominican Republic has waited sixty years for a novel equal to its implications. The Albatross Ledger is that novel. Phillip Daigle understands what most fiction about American intervention gets wrong: the damage isn't done by bad actors corrupting good institutions. The institutions produce the damage themselves, credentialing their own failures as they go. Dani Piedra's careful intelligence work doesn't get warped by the machinery; it becomes the machinery. Daigle has written the novel that puts Santo Domingo where it belongs: not as a forgotten blunder, but as the first proof of concept.

Alan McPherson, author of Yankee No! Anti-Americanism in U.S.-Latin American Relations

"A powerful and moving chronicle of an invasion the US has forgotten and the lives (and the countries) it made and broke."

JUNOT DÍAZ, AUTHOR OF THE BRIEF WONDROUS LIFE OF OSCAR WAO

The 1965 U.S...


Marketing Plan

For readers of Phil Klay's Missionaries and Denis Johnson's Tree of Smoke.

For readers of Phil Klay's Missionaries and Denis Johnson's Tree of Smoke.


Available Editions

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ISBN 9798999426086
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