From Publishers Weekly
In a spare narrative voice that packs a wallop, Taibo ( The Shadow of the Shadow ) describes a Mexico City teeming with corruption, passion and hazards for his one-eyed, half-Irish, half-Basque, Coca-Cola-swilling PI, Hector Belascoaran Shayne. Taibo's detective owes a great deal to the Dashiell Hammett prototype: while he turns a jaded eye on the affairs of men (and women), he also demonstrates loyalty and courage beyond the call of duty in his work and personal relationships. Here he rescues his sister's childhood amiga Anita after she is brutally attacked and raped upon inheriting blood money from her murdered husband. Sound complicated? The threads of corruption in this novel are tied in double and triple knots, but clean prose carries the reader through a neat process of untying them, even if credibility is strained by Anita's readiness to become sexually involved with the hero before she has so much as removed the bandages from her injuries. In an interesting twist, characteristic of his playful literary sensibility, Taibo portrays Shayne's encounter with a writer of dubious success who bears the author's own given names, Paco Ignacio. Taibo takes the gumshoe into new regions of the map and of the imagination.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
In An Easy Thing (Viking, 1990), a diffuse detective novel mixing history, mystery, and literature, Spanish-Mexican writer Taibo introduced detective Hector Belascoaran Shayne, a tough-guy Mexican detective fond of soda pop. In Some Clouds , the detective reappears to take on a corrupt cop. When an old man named Costa dies of a heart attack, a large fortune in his name is discovered in various parts of Mexico. Two of his sons are subsequently killed and a third driven mad. When the widow of one of the brothers is beaten, raped, and threatened if she does not give up the inheritance, Belascoaran Shayne investigates, getting clues from an old college chum-become-mob-boss and a novelist who writes books very much like those of Taibo himself. Taibo focuses the plot of this slim volume more than in his earlier book, but a pervasive, grisly fatalism; the powerful depiction of Mexico City's corruption; and Belascoaran Shayne himself are what make the book worth reading.
- Harold Augen braum, Mercantile Lib., New YorkCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.