Death Under the Perseids
Teresa Dovalpage
Beyond being a riveting and pleasurable read, Death Under the Perseids by Teresa Dovalpage provides an uncommon perspective on present-day Havana, one that is apolitical and unclouded by nostalgia. Nearly thirty, Mercedes, a native-born Habanera now living in the U.S., unspools the narrative with clear-eyed sharpness. Though seen as dimwitted and called “burra” by her first love Lorenzo, Mercedes emerges as a shrewd relationship strategist. Looking to trade up, she leaves Lorenzo for Nolan Spivey, a middle-aged American academic who brings her to Gainesville, Florida. This results in disappointment for both. Nolan forfeits his career and family to marry Mercedes, and life with a husband—now divorced, unemployed, and depressed—fails to provide the happily-ever-after Mercedes envisioned. Winning a pair of tickets for a free cruise to Cuba lifts her spirits at the same time as it offers Nolan a professional opportunity. But, in a state of self-deprecation heightened by her return to Cuba, Mercedes falls prey to suspicion bordering on paranoia. Following a few troubling coincidences, she succumbs to binge-drinking on the cruise. Once in Havana, Mercedes finds the city leaning more overtly toward tourism, mirroring the economic pragmatism that spurred her own departure. “I began to dream of a modern house and exotic vacations that my current boyfriend couldn’t afford,” she reflects. “I belonged in La Yuma, as we called the United States. I was wasting my time here in Cuba, where there weren’t many opportunities whether you went to college or not.” |
In Havana, familiar sights, sounds, and smells stir her regret over abandoning Lorenzo, who was imprisoned on false charges and died in a house fire after Mercedes left him. She’s also shamed by the living conditions endured by Mamita, the grandmother who raised her, and chagrinned by the state of the home in which she was raised. “The once-ivory stucco was cracking and peeling in more areas than not,” she notes when arriving for a short visit with Mamita. “It had never looked like a happy place, but the neglect was now more obvious and painful than ever.”
In four parts—“Waiting in Port,” “What Happens on Ship,” “Las Perseidas,” and “Letters from the Heart”—comprised of tightly written short chapters, the novel inscribes the cruise from Miami to Havana, before returning Mercedes to Gainesville. This relatively short voyage transports Mercedes back in time to another iteration of self, reacquainting her with a trio of ruthless, self-serving acquaintances along the way. Well-paced and suspenseful, the novel flows briskly, so it is up to readers to slow down and smell the flowers (gardenias, in this case), and in so doing, savor the delectable food and evocative place details, the crafty plotting, and laugh-out-loud humor. Careful reading also reveals the contest between common sense and erudition, pitting the “burra” against the academics to frame a significant epistemological question, while delivering much ironic wit in the process.
Like Tana French in the Dublin Murder Squad series, Teresa Dovalpage links Havana Mystery novels not only by setting, but also by characterization. A cameo or background character in one narrative will spring to the foreground in another book. For example, Marlene Martínez, a secondary character in Death Comes in through the Kitchen and the main character in Death of a Telenovela Star, appears briefly, but satisfyingly here, updating readers on adventures that attach in a consequential way to Mercedes’ fate. While fans will appreciate the connection and find this latest book to be a superb addition to the series, newcomers need no such context to enjoy the novel. On its own, Death Under the Perseids makes an outstanding contribution to the whodunit genre and to contemporary Latinx literature as a whole.
In four parts—“Waiting in Port,” “What Happens on Ship,” “Las Perseidas,” and “Letters from the Heart”—comprised of tightly written short chapters, the novel inscribes the cruise from Miami to Havana, before returning Mercedes to Gainesville. This relatively short voyage transports Mercedes back in time to another iteration of self, reacquainting her with a trio of ruthless, self-serving acquaintances along the way. Well-paced and suspenseful, the novel flows briskly, so it is up to readers to slow down and smell the flowers (gardenias, in this case), and in so doing, savor the delectable food and evocative place details, the crafty plotting, and laugh-out-loud humor. Careful reading also reveals the contest between common sense and erudition, pitting the “burra” against the academics to frame a significant epistemological question, while delivering much ironic wit in the process.
Like Tana French in the Dublin Murder Squad series, Teresa Dovalpage links Havana Mystery novels not only by setting, but also by characterization. A cameo or background character in one narrative will spring to the foreground in another book. For example, Marlene Martínez, a secondary character in Death Comes in through the Kitchen and the main character in Death of a Telenovela Star, appears briefly, but satisfyingly here, updating readers on adventures that attach in a consequential way to Mercedes’ fate. While fans will appreciate the connection and find this latest book to be a superb addition to the series, newcomers need no such context to enjoy the novel. On its own, Death Under the Perseids makes an outstanding contribution to the whodunit genre and to contemporary Latinx literature as a whole.
Teresa Dovalpage was born in Havana and now lives in Hobbs, where she is a professor at NMJC. She is the author of twelve novels and three theater plays. Her most recent book is Death under the Perseids, the fourth in the Havana Mystery series published by Soho Crime.
Death Under the Perseids (2021) is a publication by Soho Crime. Click here to purchase.
Death Under the Perseids (2021) is a publication by Soho Crime. Click here to purchase.
Comment Box is loading comments...
|
|