A few streets pretty much in ruins are all that’s left of Havana’s China
Town. When the ex detective Conde enters it, he
cannot help remembering that he had already been there years ago, in 1989. The
irresistible lieutenant, Patricia Chio, had asked him
to help her solve a strange case: the murder of Pedro Cuang,
an old man that was found hung, with a finger cut off and a circle and two
arrows etched on his chest. These were Santeria rituals that brought on the
investigation of other neighborhoods around the city. Conde
discovered unexpected connections, secret businesses and a story of self-denial
and disgrace that revealed the reality of many families of Asian emigrants and
their sporadic contacts with Cubans. As the Chinese saying goes, he only had to
find the snake’s tail to reach the head. In Conde’s
comings and goings between past and present, in his loitering around a caotic city, we will breathe again the familiar air of the
circle of friends, women, and dangers with which the Cuban detective will
become involved.
“Leonardo Padura is the Dashiell Hammett of Havana.” The Guardian
Leonardo Padura was born in Havana in 1955. He obtained a degree in Spanish Language
and Literature from the University of Havana, and has worked as a scriptwriter,
journalist, and critic. He is the author of essays, collections of short
stories, and of La novela de mi vida
(The Novel of My Life) about the poet
José María Heredia, but is best known for his series of crime novels starring
Detective Mario Conde. These have been translated into many languages, and have
won prestigious literary awards such as the Café Gijón Prize in 1995, the Hammett
Prize for best crime novel in 1997, 1998, and 2005, the Premio de las Islas, in 2000, in
France, the Brigada 21 Prize to the
best novel of the year, as well as several editions of the Cuban Critics Prize and the National
Prize for Novel in 1993. The Mario Conde series, acclaimed by readers and
critics alike, is thus far made up of six novels: Pasado perfecto (Past Perfect), Vientos de cuaresma (Lenten Winds),
Máscaras (Masks), Paisaje de otoño (Autumn Landscape), Adiós, Hemingway
(Good-bye, Hemingway) and La neblina
del ayer (The Mist of Yesterday). In all of them, “el Conde” investigates
cases that bring the reader to the heart of contemporary Cuba.