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Average rating3
A portrait of small-time crooks and immigrant gangs in Argentina's capital... Lucas is a humble watch-seller moonlighting for a gang of armed robbers. He wants to go straight but instead becomes more entangled when he joins gang leader Gustavo in extortion work for the triads. "The chapters are tight and frenetic, and the author's prose is deft and vivid. Beyer seems intimately familiar with his setting, and does well in colourfully portraying the unsavoury sort lurking in the shadows."
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This novel is only crossing over with genres I read - I am fond of classic noir (Chandler, Spillane, some Hammett) and I read only a little modern crime fiction, but I was offered a copy to read and review by the author, so here we are.
This is a short book, such that it could almost be a novella and as advertised, it moves fairly quickly through its plot. The timeline is strictly linear, and for me there were perhaps not the plot twists I might have expected for a crime noir story.
Set in Argentina, and with very good description and context demonstrates the author has put time and effort into the background details - which is important to make the story feel legitimate. It doesn't come across as a forced setting, but folds around the action in the story. Immigrants - Venezuelans, Bolivians and the Chinese form an important part of the story and the setting, as do the tourists who are at first the targets for the criminals.
There are few characters, and the ones we spend time with are reasonably fleshed out. The main protagonist, Lucas, enters a life of crime in small steps, moving from receiving stolen watches for his shop to acting as lookout, to being a part of the action. He finds himself wrapped up in the situation quite quickly and unable to extricate himself when things get a bit hot. Instead he flees the city, and on return, is again embroiled in trouble, ending up working for a Chinese crime organisation - one of the triad groups operating in Buenos Aires. The issue I had with Lucas is that he is not particularly likeable - there wasn't much to keep me hoping for a good outcome, as he never really showed much motivation to improve his life. I get that he was entangled and was in a position where he couldn't withdraw his involvement easily, but he perhaps lacked purpose in this respect.
As a debut novel, it was reassuring that the author showed restraint with his ideas. It is all too common that an author wants to take every idea, every thought, every character they have invented and shoe-horn them into their first novel, and as such the novel loses shape and suffers. In this novel the storyline and characters are much more on focus.
For me 3 stars, perhaps 3.5 stars, for a short, easy to read entertainment.