Balas de plata was unanimously chosen the winner to the III Tusquets Editores Prize for Novel and consecrates Élmer Mendoza
as a top-notch novelist. The jury, made up of Juan Marsé (as chairman),
Almudena Grandes, Jorge Edwards, Evelio Rosero, and Beatriz de Moura, valued
the “raging modernity in the use of language, the narrative structure that has
much to do with the language inspired by television, and the hellish rhythm
that, as in the best classical novel, does not allow the reader a break until
its final outcome”. The author himself says, “I aspire for my readers to fear
dying before finishing the book.”
Police agent Edgar “Left-handed” Mendieta is crushed
after having been abandoned by the woman he loved, he is in dire need of a
psychoanalyst, and his work keeps piling up, when he takes on the murder case
of Bruno Canizales. Canizales, a prestigious lawyer with a double life, son of
the ex-minister of Agriculture, is found dead with a silver bullet through his
head. Mendieta’s cell phone does not cease to ring with calls from his superior
with news about new corpses in only a matter of days. Who is behind these
murders? Drug traffickers? Politicians agitated by the upcoming elections? The
members of the Small Universal Fraternity to which Canizales belonged? With
great humor and loads of adrenaline, the investigation takes place in dumps and
in mansions and offers a mix of reporters, beautiful lesbians, and an intricate
bundle of perverse interests. The only one who is really convinced to get to
the heart of the matter and impose justice is Mendieta. Probably because he has
nothing left to lose.
“One of the great names of current Mexican literature,
as time will tell... A pure narrator who does not criticize nor defend the
novel, but rather tells it.”
Arturo
Pérez-Reverte, El Universal
About El amante de
Janis Joplin
“Seduced by oral narration, we are shocked by the
unending succession of events. His narrative art and creation of characters
reveal that we are before an artist.”
Arturo García
Ramos, ABC Cultural
“Élmer Mendoza establishes a new path in crime
fiction… The author makes clear what André Gide demanded of all novelists: To
have ample knowledge of the subject treated. Mendoza does, and that is why his
novel evolves with a looseness and disinhibition that was much needed in
Mexican literature.”
Daniel Sada
“Mendoza presents a universe that is both excessive
and real, and an antihero that is as real as he is adorable.”
José Luis
Charcán, La Razón
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.”