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Death Of The Last Villista

(Book #5 in the Texana Jones Series)

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Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Like New

$8.59
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Book Overview

In 1961, a Hollywood movie company came to tiny Polvo, Texas, to film a movie about Pancho Villa. However, the film was dogged with trouble: a man was found murdered on an island in the middle of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

More character than Mystery

I have enjoyed the Allana Martin series a great deal because I know the area she writes of so well (as obviously Publisher's "Weakly" does not--they have the wrong river. Texana lives on the Rio Grande, well over a hundred miles from any stretch of the Pecos River). I know the area well and Martin has captured it exquisitely. That, along with the development of her characters, both major and minor, makes the series worthwhile. Most of her mysteries don't necessarily hold the reader breathlessly enthralled. However, if one follows the series, the borderlands of Texas come alive. In this story, for example, Texana Jones, the narrator, has to come to terms with her recluse father and the memory of her mother. The events of the present-day movie-making reveal an entire new picture of her parents. In many of our own lives, we suddenly stumble upon some fact or event which radically alters our view of our parents and the memories we hold of them. The greater mystery in this tale lies in the relationships of the past than the murders, either then or now. I found the crafted redrawing of histories, Texana's, her parents',Polvo's, and even that of the Villista quite entertaining and thought-provoking. I recommend this book, especially if you have followed the series in order. Ms. Martin's tales collectively may be less mysterious than one might desire, but they do demystify one of the last frontiers.

Another winner--wide open West Texas country

Decades ago, moviemakers came to the west Texas town where Texana Jones lives with her vet-husband--and one of them was killed. Now, some of the stars are returning to film a documentary and memories of that long-ago murder are resurfacing.Texana can ignore a threatening note, but when a mobile home is destroyed and several people injured, she has to investigate. She learns more than she wanted to know about the past--her mother's relationship with the victim, and an excellent motive for her father to have been the killer.Author Allana Martin does a wonderful job describing the wild west Texas country, but also the close-knit community that it inspires. Some of the best scenes in this novel come where Texana is simply experiencing her every-day life--which is much of a mystery to those of us who live in urban areas.Another fine effort in this enjoyable series.

Great atmospheic mystey

The border land adjacent to both sides of the Rio Grande has its own rhythm, culture, and language that sets it apart from the rest of both countries. Texanna Jones operates a trading post two miles west of Polo, a small hamlet of hundred and twenty-five people. She has lived there all her life and is part of the community that took part in the filming of Pancho, a movie about the 1917 raid of the Moore Ranch by Villa and his followers. To add authenticity to the film, the director hired former Villa follower Jacinto Trejo on as a consultant. Trejo was killed shortly before the movie ended. Now an independent video producer is creating a PBS special celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the movie. The male lead in Pancho is a big hit in a TV sitcom, hence the PBS special. Texanna is leasing land to the moviemakers and the trading post is the center of operations. At the beginning of the production, the RV of the male lead blows up and nobody is sure whether it is an accident or arson. A young boy goes missing and Texanna finds out that her mother and Trejo were lovers before he was killed. Allana is unable to let past secrets stay buried and is determined, for her mother's sake, to find out who killed Trejo, but somebody wants past secrets to stay hidden. DEATH OF THE LAST VILLISTA is much more than a mystery; it is a glimpse into a subculture that is a part of yet separate from the rest of the United States and Mexico. The characters give the novel atmosphere and a sense of what it is like living on the border. Allana Martin has created a novel that has depth yet remains very entertaining.Harriet Klausner
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