
Book Details:
Author: Morgan Hatch
Release Date: July 31, 2025Series:
Genre: Crime Fiction, Political Thriller, Suspense, Socio-Political Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย
Pages: 310 pages
Publisher: –
Blurb:
The first in a suspenseful new trilogy, a fast-paced thriller set in the streets of Los Angeles, featuring a Mexican American high school senior embroiled in a conspiracy that threatens to destroy his neighborhood.
Javier Jimenez is on a glide path to college while his brother, Alex, has done a 180 and is heading for trouble. Neither, however, have any idea what’s coming their way when George Jones sets in motion his plan for their neighborhood. “Some people flip homes. I flip zip codes.” It’s a cataclysmic vision of urban renewal replete with manmade disasters, civil unrest, and a tsunami of ambitious Zoomers.
Meanwhile, Alex and Javier’s feud quickly escalates, even as Alex finds himself in way over his head with Denker Street, the local gang. The bodies start falling, and Javier soon realizes Jones has put a target on his back. It’s time to go to ground. Can he keep Alex from falling further into the streets? Can he outplay Jones at his own game? All this and his own hopes, once so bright, now fading like a smog-shrouded LA skyline.
Review
Gone to Ground by Morgan Hatch is a bold, razor-sharp novel that dives headfirst into the urban sprawl of Los Angeles and never once comes up for air. As a writer and editor, I found myself appreciating not just the storyโs complexity but the control with which author Hatch moves between perspectives, timelines, and characters. Itโs dense but never bloated, gritty but with a heart that pulses beneath the asphalt.
The story follows Javier, a high school senior doing his best to keep his little brother Alex from falling into the gravitational pull of gang life in the San Fernando Valley. What begins as a familiar tale of familial loyalty quickly expands into a high-stakes political and financial thriller, complete with corporate sabotage, environmental scandal, and cold-blooded real estate warfare. The threads are numerous, but author Hatch pulls them taut with precision.
What I particularly loved was the author’s ear for dialogue and his eye for detail. Whether itโs a classroom filled with half-asleep teens or a power-lunch between political sharks, the writing is immersive and confidently observant. Characters like Betzaidaโthe tough, queer tow truck operator and half-sister to Javierโleap off the page with authenticity. And George Jones, the bookโs Machiavellian fixer, is a villain you love to hate, dripping with charm and menace.
The pacing is deliberate, and thatโs the one reason Iโm giving this 4 stars instead of 5. Some narrative detours, while insightful, felt slightly indulgent and slowed the momentum during otherwise taut sequences. But itโs a small price to pay for the scope and ambition of what author Hatch accomplishes.
Gone to Ground isnโt just about a city, itโs about the people hanging on to their dignity as the ground shifts beneath them. Itโs a book that challenges, informs, and, most importantly, feels alive. Highly recommended for fans of Don Winslow, George Pelecanos, and Walter Mosley.




