The mutilated body of Mayra Cabral de Melo, a
well-known stripper, is found, and the detective Edgar “Left-Handed” Mendieta is chosen to investigate the case. He has personal
reasons for finding the culprit. The investigation will bring him even closer
to the world of narcos,
who have started a war against the Mexican state. The country is a powder keg,
and Mendieta will live the worst days of his life. He
will need to face not only dark politicians, failed boxers, weapon dealers, and
even the FBI when the father of the President of the United States is attacked,
but also his devious past that will not leave him alone. As if this was not
enough, the reappearance of Samantha Valdés, now the
boss of the Cartel del Pacífico, will add yet another piece to this impossible
puzzle as Mendieta continues to investigate the death
of Mayra.
Élmer Mendoza was born in Culiacán (México) in 1949. He is a professor at the
Autonomous University of Sinaloa. Mexican critics consider him “the first
narrator who manages a true account of the effects of drug trafficking in our
country”. He has been awarded the XVII José
Fuentes Mares National Literary Prize, and he was a finalist, in 2005, to the Dashiell Hammett Prize. He also won the III Tusquets Editores Prize for novel in 2007 with Balas de plata (Silver Bullets, 2008).
Praise for Balas de plata:
“Time will prove him to be one of the great names in contemporary Mexican
literature... A pure narrator who does not criticize nor
defend the novel, but rather tell it.” Arturo Pérez-Reverte
“Runaway energy. In Balas de plata, the language is an explosive corrido. The best
possible option is to feel it, to allow yourself to be
dragged by its runaway energy, comprable to that of
the film Amores perros, by
Alejandro González Iñarritu.”
El Periódico
“Splendid from every possible point of view. The plot and the vertiginous rhythm captivate the reader from beginning
to end.” Rosa Mora, El País
“Mendoza has come to stay because
he writes about the crisis of democracy with energetic, suggestive, essential
and, at its best, merciless writing.” Corriere della Sera
“The most fascinating aspect of Balas de plata is the extraordinary portrait
of his country that Mendoza offers us. It is a portrait that depicts violence
as something humanly natural, a violence that conditions a society tolerant of
injustice and impunity.” Pedro Justino Alves, Diário digital (Portugal)
Élmer Mendoza was born in Culiacán (México) in 1949. He is a
professor at the Autonomous University of Sinaloa. He coordinates seven groups
of starting novelists throughout Mexico. From 1978 to 1995, he published five
volumes of short stories and two of chronicles, and in 1999, his first novel, Un asesino solitario (A Lonely Killer),
which immediately situated him, according to the Mexican literary critic
Federico Campbell, as “the first narrator who manages a true account of the
effects of drug trafficking in our country”. El amante de Janis Joplin (The
Lover of Janis Joplin) was awarded the XVII José Fuentes Mares National
Literary Prize and Efecto Tequila
(Tequila Effect) was a finalist, in
2005, to the Dashiell Hammett Prize. In 2006, his fourth novel, Cóbraselo caro (Make It Expensive) was
published. Arturo Pérez-Reverte has said about Mendoza, “He is my friend and my
teacher. The Queen of the South was
born from the taverns, the narcocorrido
music and his novels.”