Havana Fever (Mario Conde Investigates)
<div><p class="MsoNormal">“The finest crime-fiction writer in the Spanish language...â€<I>--The London Times</I></p> <p class="MsoNormal">“Full of atmosphere and descriptions to savour, this is as much a life-affirming tribute to Havana as a fine novel of death and detection.â€<I>--The Independent</I></p> <p class="MsoNormal">“Police work is not merely a vocation but a metaphor for a futile yearning to solve the island’s deepest crimes and misdemeanours.â€--<I>Times Literary Supplement</I></p><p>Mario Conde has retired from the police force and makes a living trading in antique books. Havana is now flooded with dollars, populated by pimps, prostitutes, drug dealers, and other hunters of the night. In the book collection of a rich Cuban who fled after the fall of Batista, Conde discovers an article about Violeta del Rio, a beautiful bolero singer of the 1950s who disappeared mysteriously. A murder soon follows. This is a crime story set in today’s darker Cuba, but it is also an evocation of the Havana of Batista, the city of a hundred night clubs where the paths of Marlon Brando and Meyer Lansky crossed.</p><p>Probably <B>Leonardo Padura</B>’s best book, <I>Havana Fever</I> is many things: a suspenseful crime novel, a cruel family saga, and an ode to literature and his beloved, ravaged island.</p></div>