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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
exellent murder mystery, October 14, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Zia Summer (Mass Market Paperback)
"Zia Summer," by Rudalfo Anaya, is about a small-timepersonal investigator from Albuquerque, New Mexico, named Sonny Baca,the great-grandson of famed lawman Elfego Baca. Sonny's cousin, Gloria Dominic, who is married to Frank Dominic, a very high political figure in the town, turns up dead. She was killed with surgical precision as all of her blood was drained and not a drop was spilled. Sonny, who is trained to find missing people, is hired by his aunt to find the murderer. He finds out that Gloria had many ties with a cult from the Sandia pueblo, and this cult worshipped the sun. He also finds out that this group is planning to blow up a truck that is going to the nuclear waste site in southern New Mexico. The truck is filled with nuclear waste and if it is blown up the contamination would kill the whole state. This book was very good. The book was not only a great murder mystery, but it also had a lot of old Hispanic tales within the story. It is a great novel for anybody who likes a great book.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
So-So, October 24, 2006
This review is from: Zia Summer (Mass Market Paperback)
I'm not sure what I was expecting with this book.
I read Anaya's "Bless Me Ultima" and enjoyed it. I figured "Zia Summer" would be no different.
But it was. The flow was a bit choppy. Anaya fluctuates from spending pages discussing Chicano/Hispanic culture to the actual murder mystery plot. It came across as forced to me.
"Bless Me Ultima" was literature. "Zia Summer" was pulp fiction trying to be literature. Sadly it didn't even succeed (for me) as a sordid-page-turner-can't-put-it-down-whodunnit. I had no problem setting this book down from time to time.
Overall enjoyable, but a letdown for Anaya readers used to his more intelligent writings.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A solid southwestern mystery that kept me guessing, June 19, 1998
This review is from: Zia Summer (Mass Market Paperback)
Zia Summer started off with a classic gruesome murder, and kept the reader guessing the whole time on who was behind it right alongside the main character, Sonny Baca. Though the book had a few slow points from time to time, I always looked forward to the next chapter. The story is also peppered with an unusual and highly identifiable cast of characters; each one to the readers liking. My only complaints were to make the book more 'authentic' the author sprinkled the dialouge with Spanish slang that may confuse readers on what the characters are talking about. Also the end was a bit anti-climatic, but all around very good.
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