5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Sickening, July 15, 2009
This review is from: Breaking Lorca (Hardcover)
I've loved Blunt's police procedurals - as a writer, i absolutely support leaving a series and writing in a new direction and when recently in Ottawa bought a hardcover version of this book at first sight. That given, Breaking Lorca - despite Blunt's obvious skills as a writer - is a sickening story of the rape and torture of a woman prisoner (why do bad men in fiction, especially serial killers, usually do this to women? is this a male fantasy project?); i'm not faint of heart (i work with law enforcement personnel), but the graphic details of "Lorca" that drone on and on become loathsome; i've no compelling identification with any of the characters and scarcely believe the ending.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Horrific yet wonderful book, June 25, 2009
This review is from: Breaking Lorca (Hardcover)
After having recently read Blunt's less than impressive, "No Such Creature", I wasn't sure what to expect with this book. I was curious if he could bring back some of the magic from his Cardinal series. In a word, the answer is "yes". This is probably one of the most difficult books I've ever read, and I must give Blunt credit as an author for making the torture scenes so believable and gut-wrenching. Overall a wonderful book, that you won't easily forget if you can get through the first half. If I was in charge of El Salvadoran tourism I wouldn't like this book nearly as much :)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Different direction for Blunt, March 9, 2009
This review is from: Breaking Lorca (Hardcover)
Giles Blunt is one of my favourite Canadian authors. I'm a big fan of the John Cardinal mysteries and loved his last stand alone novel No Such Creature. Breaking Lorca is a complete departure from earlier works.
Victor, a bookish, reluctant soldier in El Salvador is 'rescued' from death by firing squad by his uncle. His uncle, Captain Pena, is a specialist in the army - an interrogation expert. He means to school Victor in his trade. He is an expert in torture. When a suspected female rebel, Lorca, is imprisoned, Pena decides that she should be Victor's learning ground. Victor is not by nature a violent, evil man. In fact he describes himself as a coward. What will someone do to keep themself alive?
This is not an easy read. Descriptions and dialogue are absolutely horrific and brutal. I did have to read it in small doses. What kept me going? My faith in Giles Blunt as an author. The second part of the novel moves to America, where Victor seeks redemption from his past. But can the past ever be escaped?
What possessed Blunt to write such a novel? He was inspired by Canadian author and activist Margaret Atwood's poem "Footnote to the Amnesty Report on Torture", which imagines "a fearful man paid to clean up the torture chamber."
A compelling, thought provoking narrative of what is most likely happening somewhere in the world at this moment. I was glad I chose to read til the last page.
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