Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This ethnic mystery series just keeps getting better, September 24, 2000
Cuban-American private investigator Lupe Solano cannot stand attending the society wedding even if her cousin is the bride. However, the boring reception picks up when the groom,'s Aunt Lucia declares that an eighth Unicorn Tapestry exists in Havana. Lupe knows that the Upper Manhattan Cloisters Museum houses the seven known tapestries, but the possibility of another one is intriguing except for a trip back to Cuba to obtain the priceless item. As Lupe mulls over the wisdom of a clandestine visit to Havana, sleazy art dealer Angel Estrada tries to hire Lupe to also go to Cuba to smuggle out paintings by his sister. Finally, her former lover attorney Tommy McDonald wants Lupe to look into the ownership of an apparently stolen painting. When murder enters the fray, Lupe realizes Havana may be her only chance of not becoming the next victim. HAVANA HEAT, the fifth Lupe Solano mystery, is an exciting tale that provides focus on the Cuban-American population. The story line includes three cases that keep Lupe hopping non-stop. Lupe retains her freshness and the support cast propels the tale forward, provides humor to the plot and adds insight into the lead character. Carolina Garcia-Aguilera has written another strong ethnic mystery that showcases her ability to provide the audience with an engaging novel. Harriet Klausner
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13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Enough Already, October 19, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Havana Heat: A Lupe Solano Mystery (Lupe Solano Mysteries) (Mass Market Paperback)
I continue to read this series since I live in Miami and love reading novels that take place here. However, each time I read one of this author's Lupe Solano books, I find myself asking why. OK, we get that Lupe is Cuban. But why does every book have to revolve so totally around this fact? I don't recall any other mystery series where the main character's background or heritage is so prominently featured in every single story. There are plenty of other aspects to Miami which could be incorporated into these books...every breath Lupe draws, every step she takes, every time she goes to the bathroom, does *not* have to revolve around Cuba, or the history of Cuba, or thoughts of Cuba, for the book to be worth reading. Maybe the author should take a few hints from Edna Buchanan or Barbara Parker, who manage to instill a Cuban flavor in their Miami novels while not making you feel you're having it shoved down your throat with every page you turn. I've been around Cuban "society" for many years, and the author goes overboard with it, making her characters come across as snooty, stuffy and unbearable...and not at all real. The Mercedes, the Hattaras, the Armani suits, the ostentatious house...enough already. Lupe is well-off, we get that. We don't need to be hit over the head with it in every paragraph. I feel that Ms. Aguilera-Garcia uses these books as a springboard for her own political agendas and personal feelings on Cuba and being Cuban. If that's what she wishes to do, that's fine. But these books should be promoted that way, rather than as mysteries. Because in reality, that's all they really are -- a chance for the author to hop up on her Cuban bandwagon and sing a very repetitious tune.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A detective thriller with Cuban-American spice, July 30, 2003
This review is from: Havana Heat: A Lupe Solano Mystery (Lupe Solano Mysteries) (Mass Market Paperback)
"Havana Heat," by Carolina Garcia-Aguilera, is a detective thriller featuring Miami-based private investigator Lupe Solano. She is a Cuban-American woman in her 30s. She's tough, resourceful, daring, and sometimes a little lusty. The author bio inside the back cover notes that Garcia-Aguilera was born in Cuba, and like her heroine worked as a licensed private detective in Miami. In this story Lupe becomes involved in two cases involving valuable works of art. Along the way she faces personal danger, deceit and murder. This is a fast-moving, colorful, and sometimes funny tale. The international intrigue and adventure often give the book a sort of James Bond feel--in fact, I could imagine agent 007 finding a worthy partner in Lupe if one of his assignments ever brought him to Miami. The author does a particularly effective job in illuminating the practical, nuts-and-bolts aspects of Lupe's detective technique. The book is not only an exciting detective thriller--it also is very much about Cuban-American history, politics, and identity. As an "ethnic" American detective, Lupe could be seen as sort of a soul sister to Harry Kemelman's Rabbi Small. But whether you look at this book as a straightforward mystery or as part of the tradition of ethnic American literature, I think that "Havana Heat" is a winner.
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