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Paperback Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery Book

ISBN: 1558855432

ISBN13: 9781558855434

Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery

In Lucha Corpis story, "Hollow Point at the Synapses," her unique narrator, a bullet, describes the instant before killing a young Peruvian woman: "I feel the pull of the hammer. The pressure mounts.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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We receive 3 copies every 6 months.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A highly recommended read for mystery fans everywhere

Mystery is a genre that captivates readers of every culture. "Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery" is a collection of short stories from acclaimed Latino short fiction authors. The anthologies use elements which are uniquely Latino in their writing, yet the stories will still ring out and hold keen interest for readers of any color or heritage. "Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery" is a highly recommended read for mystery fans everywhere.

Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery

Very good compilations of mysteries, especially the one written by L. Quinn. Simply wonderful and a must read.

A Friend Opens the Door

I'm not a fan of short stories, but my friend (L.M. Quinn) has a story in this collection called "A Clear Cut Case of Murder." Makes it required reading, no? It's written with a consistent mood, it's intellectual, interesting, and her characters are well drawn, from a cancer ridden research analyst drawn into a murder mystery to "missing husbands and non-existant nephews" (P. 109) ...a story like a vacuum that sucks you in from the first paragraph. To paraphrase a clever bit of marketing, betcha can't read just one! I found myself absorbed in murder, mayhem, money, revenge, twists, and sorrow, with plenty of "GOTCHA!" In Lucha Corpi's "Hollow Point at the Synapses," I met a cold steely character brought to life, like magic. Sarah Cortez, one of the capable editors of the collection, shows us relationships turned inside out, in "In My Hands." Carolina Garcia-Aguilera's "The Right Profile," is as satisfying as seeing a cop pull over the guy who just sped by you at 90 MPH. Each one of these authors deserves his/her own kudos, but I don't have time here to continue. This is a group of stories for everyone. Even the Spanish words, when they're included don't require a facility for the language. The characters are

Fine collection should engross any lover of mystery (not just Latinos)

With the newly released "Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery" (Arte Público Press, $19.95 paperback), editors Sarah Cortez and Liz Martínez have succeeded in bringing together some of the best mystery fiction being written today. This anthology features the work of Mario Acevedo, Lucha Corpi, Sarah Cortez, Carolina García-Aguilera, Alicia Gaspar de Alba, Carlos Hernandez, Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, Bertha Jacobson, John Lantigua, Arthur Muñoz, R. Narvarez, L.M. Quinn, Manuel Ramos, S. Ramos O'Briant, A.E. Roman, Steven Torres and Sergio Troncoso. In the foreword to "Hit List," Ralph E. Rodriguez, an associate professor in the Department of American Civilization at Brown University, observes that the reader "will find no boring Latino caricatures or stereotypes in this volume." There is no doubt about that. The anthology begins with a tightly wound, two-page bit of tough-talking noir by best-selling novelist Mario Acevedo titled "Oh, Yeah." In it, the narrator attempts to teach a seemingly dimwitted accomplice named Canela how to play a supporting role in an armed robbery. Of course, things go awry, but with a twist only an accomplished writer such as Acevedo could pull off. There's some great humor here, too, such as S. Ramos O'Briant's sardonic "Death, Taxes ... and Worms," where we're introduced to a very proper Nellie Gallegos, who knows a trifle more about the death of her neighbor than she initially admits. Several of the stories veer into wonderfully strange territory. "The Skull of Pancho Villa" by mystery novelist Manuel Ramos is based on various rumors as to the whereabouts of the Mexican revolutionary's head. The narrator, Gus Corral, informs us that the skull ended up in his family and recounts how it gets stolen from his sister's house. If you don't laugh out loud while reading this story, you have no sense of humor. In "Nice Climate, Miami," award-winning author Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, a professor of English at the University of Texas at Austin, brings us an icy killer named O'Hara who is hired to kill a man who has failed to pay a debt. The fact that O'Hara does not appear to have any connection to Chicano or Latino culture is proof that the editors saw no reason to pigeonhole or unduly restrict Latino mystery. Hinojosa-Smith's piece is crisp and smart and fits perfectly in this anthology. But ethnic identity is certainly part of the collection. Sergio Troncoso's "A New York Chicano" involves one Ricky Quintana, an El Paso native who has made it in New York working for Merrill Lynch and who has developed a deep hatred for a bloviating, anti-immigrant host of a television show titled "America's Watch." What Quintana does to appease this hatred proves that he hasn't lost his identity at all. No mystery collection would be complete without a lost soul or two. Alicia Gaspar de Alba's "Short Cut to the Moon" gives us exactly that in a troubled young woman who goes deep into alcoholic homelessness when she believes that her cousin
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