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Havana Twist: A Willa Jansson Mystery
 
 
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Havana Twist: A Willa Jansson Mystery [Paperback]

Lia Matera (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 5, 2002
Never before have the stakes been so high, or so personal, for "one of the most articulate and surely the wittiest of women sleuths at large in the genre" (The New York Times Book Review). As she investigates the mysterious disappearance of her own peacenik mother, Willa finds herself doing the Havana Twist.

Attorney Willa Jansson has finally managed to unload some of her sixties baggage, but her rebellious mother can't seem to mellow out. When Mom heads to Cuba with a band of graying "brigadistas" Willa figures it's just a pilgrimage to lefty Graceland. But then the rest of the group returns without her mother, and Willa fears the worst. Risking disbarment for "trading with the enemy" she rushes to the rescue -- and discovers that her mother may have finally gotten herself into more trouble then she can get herself out of.

In a deadly game of cat and mouse, Willa follows her mother's path from Havana to Mexico City, from California back to Havana, getting manipulated, misled, and nearly arrested along the way. Soon she finds two angry governments, at least one ruthless killer, and her old flame, homicide Lieutenant Surgelato, are hot on her trail. Racing against time, Willa realizes that, much more than politics and police work, it is intuition that will help her find her mother -- and those things that only a daughter knows.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Too often, the tension in a mystery flows from the same source as in a horror movie: As the character walks alone toward the empty, sinister house at night (of course), the audience collectively wrings its hands and groans, "Don't go in there." One can't help but wish that she or he were endowed with a little more common sense. Carry a flashlight, call for backup--something, for God's sake.

Fortunately, Havana Twist offers an antidote to that cliche in Willa Jansson, a no-nonsense Santa Cruz lawyer whose good judgement is matched only by her wry sense of humor--though sometimes neither is enough to keep her out of trouble. And this time, it's her own mother who has put her there.

When Jansson's political-activist mom doesn't return from Cuba with her group of "Jewish mothers of politics, ready to chicken-soup the whole third world," Willa must travel to the Communist island in search of her "Superlefty" mother. Jansson keeps a low profile as she searches Havana's dilapidated neighborhoods, trusting few with the fact of her mother's disappearance--and with good reason. The city's ubiquitous hotel room bugs, vanishing informants, and tight-lipped locals create a shifty atmosphere in which the unspoken can be as revealing as the spoken.

While smartly pursuing her mother's whereabouts and trying to stay out of jail, Willa manages to find a little time for a romance of sorts, although she's not unaware of the irony in her attraction to the police detective who was once almost fired because of her mother's police protest.

Matera adeptly adds unforeseen twists and turns to the plot, though she leaves it up to the reader to ponder which clues are bona fide and which are dead-ends. Matera has a knack for characterization and dialogue, and her contrast between Cuba's bleak economy, Mexico City's gaudy commercialism, and the U.S.'s comparative wealth adds a little sociopolitical weight to the story. Smart, sensible Willa Jansson is a pleasure to accompany on her search for that grey-haired brigadista she calls Mom. --Kris Law --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Willa Jansson, Matera's plucky sleuthing lawyer (Star Witness, 1997), deserves a Daughter of the Year award for the latest adventure. This time, her mother, an unrepentant social activist, goes international, failing to return with her gray-haired group of brigadistas after their goodwill tour of Havana. Doubting that her mom, even with her "dances with revolutionaries" fervor, would abandon her family without a word, Willa goes to Havana, where she falls in with two suspiciously helpful journalists who offer to help but lead Willa to some unexpected stops along the way. These include visits to Lidia Gomez, an internationally acclaimed poet placed under house arrest for "leafletting," and an American woman, Myra Wilson, being held in prison for drug smuggling. With Havana's bubbling mix of journalists, possible CIA agents and heroes of the revolution, it's no wonder Willa comes to feel that nothing is as it seems in the nightmarishly deteriorating place. Matera uses the complexities of the Cuban revolution and modern skullduggery to build her tale, which is slightly hobbled by a few contrived plot turns and staple characters. But the appealing Willa is fun to watch as she reacts with healthy doses of common sense, fear, humble confusion and wit to her various troubles. Her mother did a good job of raising her?but readers may be less willing than the well-grounded Willa to forgive her mother this madcap escapade.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (April 5, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743242521
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743242523
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,622,526 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars No cigar, May 12, 1999
By A Customer
Written in the first person, at times "Havana Twist" reads more like an armchair travel book than a mystery novel. The Willa Jansson character is no ass-kicking feminist detective. Instead she leaves the hard work to her cop ex-boyfriend. He tries to solve the case while she worries about what to wear and if she'll get back together with him. When a man is shot dead beside her, she worries about a pinpoint powder burn on her thumb.

It paints the usual doom and gloom picture of Cuba, which I found to be extremely exaggerated (Are there really no dogs in Cuba??). I can only assume this was either for fictional impact or for political reasons; either way, this is not a book that anyone with a regard for accuracy will enjoy. There is certainly no attempt to balance or justify the constant depiction of Cuba as a sinister country, filled with paranoia and corruption, where you can trust no one. In fact the evil Chinese military and Hispanic villains lend the book racist undertones.

I found the style a bit self-conscious and culturally specific. Her cultural reference points were solidly two decades behind (an Andy Gibb look-alike??!!) and her new-age yuppie lifestyle does not contrast well with an attempt at a gritty third-world murder story.

To the book's credit, I did make it through to the end (although the plot was so tedious and cumbersome that I lost interest several times). It is constructed like the recollection of a bad dream, which makes the whole book lack believability. The book has its characters suddenly coming across deserted tunnels, meeting dark mysterious figures, suffering from mother anxiety, falling down shafts, running for airplanes.... Freud would have a field day. As the supporting characters are murdered around her, our heroine shows little remorse. I was waiting for a twist like the title suggested but it never came.

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Confused local color, November 16, 1999
By A Customer
Havana Twist is one of those mysteries that drenches itself in local color. Unfortunately, Matera finds herself drenched in fatal, often hilarious mistakes.

The book reads strongly as if she's admirably decided to abide by U.S. travel regulations and never visited Cuba, choosing instead to research though books. Havana Twist contains a bewildering array of contradictory descriptions seemingly taken from different periods of recent Cuban history.

That might not matter except that she makes her descriptions of Cuba and her character's paranoia in the atmosphere there central to the development of the plot.

She describes the action as occurring perhaps a decade after the start of Castro's final hour; a period that started in about 1988-89, putting the book firmly in the present.

Astonishingly, laughably, she describes Cubans fleeing from tourists. Since I started (legally) visiting Cuba in about 1992, tourists have been swarmed by Cubans.

She depicts Chinese soldiers lurking everywhere. In about 18 trips over the past few years, I've never heard that, nor have I heard dissidents or diplomats mention such a thing.

She portrays a Cuba of empty, darkened streets, bereft of gasoline. That would have been true in about 1992-94. But in the past few years, anybody has been able to buy gasoline, the streets are even sometimes clogged, and power outages have sharply dimished.

She has Willa Jansson, who must be a pitiful attorney, think that by paying a hotel in Mexican pesos she is avoiding U.S. spending restrictions. She might check Treasury on that.

She seems to think the plastic bodied Moskvich is the principle form of automotive transport. Bizarre. There are a few metal-bodied version of that car around but the Russian Lada is vastly more prevalent and is probably now outnumbered by Japanese cars, Fiats and Peugeots. I've never heard of anybody renting a Moskvich, as she has characters do. And did she ever see sparking lights on Cubana flights? The airline tends to use modern planes chartered from European companies.

She has American journalists unable to get visas. Mainstream U.S. reporters have visited routinely, on cuban granted journalists visas, for many years now. Not everybody can get in, but the wire agencies she describes surely can. Check for havana datelines in databases.

By the way, how did Jansson's boyfriend carry a gun through U.S. and Mexican airport searches?

I've been flying out of Mexico for years and haven't noticed any charred Cubana planes lately.

There are more than 1 million tourists -- the largest number from Canada and many from the United States -- visiting each year. Jansson's fear of standing out as a tourist -- in HAVANA? -- is hilarous.

I could go on, and on, and on.

If she's going to use local paranoia and atmosphere as plot elements, they ought to seem credible.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Sorry, A. Reader, January 1, 2000
By 
"A. Reader"'s comments, and those of some others here, have made me want to read some of Lia Matera's other books. Surely they must be better than Havana Twist, whose writing is pedestrian at best (the description of the Havana waterfront and other landmarks I'm familiar with are spectacularly leaden and dull, and the characterization was unrealistic at best: what a bunch of bozos, legally speaking, her protagonists were), to inspire such unthinking loyalty.

While Mr. or Ms. "Reader" assures us she or he knows Cuba by drifting away from the tourist zones and can vouch for Matera (despite the efforts of sinister taxi drivers), I've visited Cuba about 20 times over the past seven years and have spent more time with open and avowed dissidents than "A. Reader" has spent altogether in Cuba. The statements referring to me by name, impugning my motives on easily provable false grounds, and posted anonymously, might be considered libelous in some contexts, if anybody was infantile enough to give them credence.

My failure to describe Matera's undescriptive description of Mexico City -- and its laws -- where I've lived for a decade -- was due to my intent not to bore potential readers.

I did very much like Martin Cruz Smith's Cuba-based mystery -- which was no more favorable to Cuba, and somewhat outdated, but vastly better written -- and recommend that anybody purchase it from Amazon.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I often hear people complain about their mothers. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
tourist police, military fatigues
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Myra Wilson, Lidia Gomez, Mexico City, San Diego, Martin Marules, Radio Havana, San Francisco, State Department, General Miguel, Juan Emilio, Agosto Diaz, Sarah Swann, Interior Ministry, Yum King, Ernest Hemingway, Associated Press, People's Republic, United States, Alicia Mendoza, June Jansson, Santa Cruz, Havana Twist, Willa Jansson, General Ochoa, Santa Barbara
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