The Silence of the White City (White City Trilogy)
The Silence of the White City (White City Trilogy) book cover

The Silence of the White City (White City Trilogy)

Kindle Edition

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Publication Date

Description

"In much the same way that Cara Black or Donna Leon portray Paris or Venice in their respective mystery series, Sáenz lovingly depicts a unique and fascinating city, weaving in Basque folklore and culture while spinning a very complex and rich story."— BookPage "Axa0work of impressive scope and depth, compellingly written." — Kirkus Reviews (starred) xa0 "Stunning. . . .xa0Fascinating local color, a handsomely crafted plot, and exquisite characterization make this a standout. Readers will eagerly await the next volume in the series." — Publishers Weekly (starred and boxed) Eva García Sáenz de Urturi was born in Vitoria and has been living in Alicante since she was fifteen years old. She published her first novel, La saga de los longevos ( The Immortal Collection ), in 2012, and it became a sales phenomenon in Spain, Latin America, the United States, and the United Kingdom. She is also the author of Los hijos de Adán ( The Sons of Adam ) and the historical novel Pasaje a Tahití ( Passage to Tahiti ). In 2016 she published the first installment of the White City Trilogy, titled El silencio de la ciudad blanca ( The Silence of the White City ), followed by Los ritos del agua ( The Water Rituals ) and Los señores del tiempo ( The Lords of Time ). --This text refers to the paperback edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 THE OLD CATHEDRAL Sunday, Julyxa024 I was enjoying the best Spanish tortilla in the world, the egg still runny and the potatoes cooked but firm, when I took the call that changed my life. For the worse, I should add. It was the eve of El Día de Santiago, and in Vitoria we were celebrating El Día de la Blusa, an homage to the youngsters who enlivened the early-xadAugust celebrations by wearing traditional smocks. The bar where I was trying to finish my tasty snack was so crowded and noisy that when I realized my cell phone was vibrating in my shirt pocket, I had to go out into Calle del Prado. “What’s wrong, Estíbaliz?” My partner didn’t usually bother me on my days off, and El Día de la Blusa and the evening before were too sacred for anyone to even think about going to work. The entire city was in a state of commotion. At first, the noise of the brass bands and the flood of people following them prevented my hearing what Estíbaliz was trying to say. “Unai, you have to come to the Old Cathedral,” she insisted. Her tone of voice, and the undercurrent of urgency and bewilderment, struck me as odd. Estíbaliz has more guts than me, and that’s saying something. I understood immediately that something serious must have happened. Trying to get away from the ever-xadpresent racket that was engulfing the city, I walked automatically toward La Florida Park so that our conversation could be at least minimally productive. “What happened?” I asked, trying to shake off the effects of the last glass of Rioja. “You won’t believe it. It’s exactly the same as twenty years ago.” “What are you talking about, Estí? I’m not at my sharpest today.” “Some archaeologists from the company restoring the cathedral found two naked corpses in the crypt. A boy and a girl, with their hands resting on each other’s cheek. You remember that, don’t you? Come right now, Unai. This is serious, very serious.” She told me where to find her and ended the call. It can’t be, I thought. It can’t be. I didn’t even say good-xadbye to my friends in the cuadrilla. They were going to stay in Sagartoki’s, in the midst of that flood of humans. It was unlikely any of them would even pay attention to their phone if I called to say that El Día de la Blusa was over forxa0me. With my colleague’s words echoing in my brain, I headed for the Plaza de la Virgen Blanca. I passed my own doorway and went up Calle de la Correría, one of the oldest streets in the medieval heart of the city. It was a bad choice. Like everywhere else in the city center that day, it was packed. La Malquerida and the other bars lining the Old City were crammed with locals. It took me more than fifteen minutes to reach La Burullería Square, at the rear of the cathedral, where I’d agreed to meet Estíbaliz. In the fifteenth century, the square had been the market of the burulleros, or weavers, who made the city one of the main trading arteries in northern Spain, and it had retained their name. As I walked across the cobblestones, the bronze statue of Ken Follett seemed to watch me go by, as if the writer had anticipated the dark web of intrigue being spun around us. Estíbaliz Ruiz de Gauna, my colleague and fellow inspector in the Criminal Investigation Unit, was waiting in the square, making a thousand phone calls, darting back and forth like a lizard. Her red hair framed her face. At five feet two inches tall, she just met the height requirement to join the force. Had Estí been any shorter, Vitoria would have lost one of its finest, most tenacious detectives. We were both damned good at solving cases, although we weren’t quite as good at playing by the rules. We had received more than one warning for disobedience, and so we’d learned to cover ourselves. As for following orders, we were working on it. We were working on it. I turned a blind eye to some of the addictions that still slipped into Estí’s life. She looked the other way when I disobeyed my superiors and investigated on my own. My specialty was criminal profiling, so I was usually called in when we had a case involving a serial killer or rapist—xadany delinquent who reoffended. If there were more than three events with a cooling-xadoff period between them, I was your man. Estíbaliz specialized in victimology, that great forgotten science. Why that person, and not someone else? She was also better than anyone at using the police databases, like the one that compiled the treads of every imaginable vehicle, or SoleMate, a guide to the footprints left by all the international makes and brands of shoes and sneakers. As soon as she saw me, she hung up her cell phone and looked at me, distraught. “What’s inside the cathedral?” I asked. “You’d better see for yourself,” she whispered, as if the heavens—xador perhaps hell—xadcould hear us, who knew? “Superxadintendent Medina himself called me. They want a profiling expert like you, and they’ve called me in to examine the victims. You’ll soon see why. I want you to tell me your first impression. The crime-xadscene techs are already here, and so are the pathologist and the judge. Let’s go in via Cuchi.” Calle Cuchillería was one of the ancient streets where the guilds had been established in the Middle Ages. Vitoria could boast an indelible record of our ancestors’ trades: La Herrería for blacksmiths, La Zapatería for shoemakers, La Correría for ropexadmakers, La Pintorería for the dyers’ guild. Despite the passage of centuries, the city’s medieval core was still intact. Oddly enough, from Calle Cuchillería you could enter the cathedral through what looked like the doorway to an ordinary dwelling. There were already two uniforms guarding the heavy wooden door at Number 85. They saluted and let us in. “I’ve questioned the two archaeologists who found them,” my colleague said. “They came today to try to make some headway with their work: the Santa María Cathedral Foundation is pressuring them to finish the crypt and the vault this year. They left us the keys. As you can see, the lock is intact. It hasn’t been forced.” “They came to work on the eve of El Día de Santiago? Isn’t that slightlyxa0.xa0.xa0. unusual for people from Vitoria?” “I didn’t notice anything strange about their reactions, Unai.” Estí shook her head. “They were shocked, or rather horrified. Horror like that isn’t faked.” All right , I thought. I trusted Estíbaliz’s judgment the way the back wheel of a bicycle trusts the front wheel. That’s how we functioned; that’s how we pedaled along. We went in through the restored porch. My colleague closed the door behind us, and the noise of the festivities finally faded. Until that moment, the news that two dead bodies had been found hadn’t really hit me; it had been too much at odds with the joyful, carefree atmosphere all around. But in that cloistered silence, with the archaeologists’ lamps dimly lighting the wooden staircase down to the crypt, it all seemed more plausible. And not exactly welcome. “Here, put on a helmet.” Estíbaliz handed me one of the white helmets bearing the foundation’s logo that every tourist visiting the cathedral was obliged to wear. “With your height, you’re bound to bump your head.” “I’ll be fine without it,” I said, busy peering around the room. “It’s mandatory,” she insisted, holding out the white monstrosity to me again and brushing the edge of my hand with her fingertips. This game we played had one very clear rule: So far and no further. In fact, there was a complementary one: Don’t ask; that’s far enough. I figured that two years without going any further constituted a status quo, an established code of conduct, and Estíbaliz and I got along very well. It was also true that she was busy with her wedding preparations, and I had been widowed for several—xad Well, that doesn’t matter. “You’re going soft,” I muttered, but took the plastic helmet. We climbed the curving staircase, leaving behind the models of the village of Gasteiz, the first settlement that had becomexa0the foundation of the city. Estíbaliz had to stop once more to find the right key to the door that would take us to the inner area of thexa0Old Cathedral, one of our city’s symbols. It had been restored and patched up more often than my childhood bike. A sign reading open greeted us on the right. I knew all my region’s emblems. They had been stored in my memory ever since the double crime of the dolmen had thrown the people of Vitoria into a panic twenty years and four months earlier. The dolmen, known as the Witch’s Lair; the Celtic village at La Hoya; the Roman salt pans at Añana; the medieval wall—xadthose were the sites a serial killer had chosen that put Vitoria and the province of Álava on the world news map. And the morbid fascination created by his macabre staging of the murders had led to the establishment of tourist trails throughout the region. I was almost twenty when it happened; my obsession with the killings became the main reason I joined the police. I followed the investigation day after day, with an anxiety that only a single-xadminded young person could understand. I analyzed what little appeared in El Diario Alavés and thought: I can do better. They’re being stupid. They’re forgetting the most important thing: the why. Although I wasn’t even twenty, I thought I was smarter than the police. How naive that seems now. Soon afterward, the truth hit me in the face harder than a boxer’s fist. I was stunned, just like all of Spain. No one expected Tasio Ortiz de Zárate to be guilty. I wouldn’t have cared if it had been anyone else: my neighbor, a Poor Clare nun, the baker, the mayor. I wouldn’t have cared. But not Tasio, our local hero who was more than an idol: he was a role model, a TV archaeologist who starred in a show that won record ratings each season, the author of books of history and mythology that sold out in weeks. Tasio was the most charismatic, entrancing character that Vitoria had produced in decades. Intelligent and, in the unanimous view of Vitoria’s women, very attractive. And duplicated. Yes, duplicated. We had two to choose from. Tasio had a monozygotic twin, and they were identical down to the way they cut their fingernails. Indistinguishable. An optimist like him, from a good family, cheerful, full of fun, cultured, well-xadmannered. At the age of twenty-xadfour, the brothers had Vitoria at their feet and a future that was generally expected to be beyond stellar, stratospheric. --This text refers to the paperback edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "You’ll want to race through
  • The Silence of the White City,
  • but it’s best to slow down and savor the full effect of the volatile, intoxicating universe Sáenz has created. This is the first novel of the White City trilogy to be translated into English—the second can’t come fast enough." —
  • AirMail
  • HOW DO YOU STOP A KILLER WHO'S ALWAYS TWO STEPS AHEAD?A madman is holding Vitoria hostage, killing its citizens in brutal ways and staging the bodies. The city's only hope is a brilliant detective struggling to battle his own demons.Inspector Unai López de Ayala, known as "Kraken," is charged with investigating a series of ritualistic murders. The killings are eerily similar to ones that terrorized the citizens of Vitoria twenty years earlier. But back then, police were sure they had discovered the killer, a prestigious archaeologist who is currently in jail. Now Kraken must race to determine whether the killer had an accomplice or if the wrong man has been incarcerated for two decades. This fast-paced, unrelenting thriller weaves in and out of the mythology and legends of the Basque country as it hurtles to its shocking conclusion.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(88)
★★★★
25%
(74)
★★★
15%
(44)
★★
7%
(21)
23%
(67)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Atmospheric mystery

To be honest, I’d forgotten that I had requested this book when the publisher approved me. When I saw that the book was 480 pages long, I groaned. My TBR list is long and I wasn’t looking forward to reading a long book that I’d requested impulsively and now suspected to be more literary than was good for it.

All that to say: I started reading in a grudging, grouchy, grumbling mood.

And within a page or two, that mood vanished. Eva Garcia Saenz lured me into her story. Though I’d intended to read only a few chapters, I kept reading The Silence of the White City throughout the day and quickly finished it.

PLOT

An archaeologist named Tasio is behind bars for the ritualistic murders that occurred twenty years earlier. For several months, pairs of victims had been found in places significant to the history of the city. Each pair was a male and a female, previously unknown to one another, with hyphenated last names; the ages of the victims were newborn, five, ten, and fifteen. The murders stopped when Tasio’s own twin brother, Ignacio, a police officer, solved the case. The cases rocked the city of Vittoria, and the current police investigator, Kraken, remembers the terror that dogged all twenty year olds with hyphenated last names: am I next?

Now Tasio, who has always maintained his innocence, will soon be released on parole. But before he is released, two new bodies are found, and the similarities are striking: a male and female, posed the same way, previously unknown to one another, with hyphenated last names, and age 20. It looks like the serial killer has continued his spree.

But how? Tasio is still behind bars . . .

Yes, the crimes are weird. The book’s opening is odd, too; our unknown serial killer has shot Inspector Kraken in the head. We don’t know if Kraken is alive or dead while he recounts the story of his investigation to us. Every so often, Kraken-as-narrator inserts his thoughts into Kraken-as-investigator’s account. I didn’t mind this, but I know some readers don’t care for it.

Interspersed with Kracken’s investigation are flashbacks about a young married woman and her doctor. These do have relevance, even if it’s not immediately apparent. I felt that this dual timeline was effective, as it helped develop the context for some important characters in the story.

The plot has the usual twists and turns. It’s slower than a typical thriller, and even slower than most current suspense or mystery novels. It has plenty of action, though, and the tension builds throughout the book until we reach the climax. But if you like your serial killer mysteries to be heart-pounding action from page one, the slower pace will frustrate you.

CHARACTERIZATION

As far as characterization goes, it’s adequate. The Inspector Kraken is the usual smart but grief-striken cop who can’t abide by the rules. His partner, Esti, and his new boss/love interest, Alba, are also decently developed, though there’s nothing terribly unusual about them. I connected emotionally with them, though. I felt their frustration at the baffling case, especially when the public makes the connection and begins to worry about 25 and 30 year olds. They demand answers. A solution. An arrest, because obviously, logic be d—d, the killer must be Tasio. Strangers walk up to Kraken and hand him list of their loved ones, trying to force him to give those people special protection (impossible) and accusing him of not caring about the potential victims. They don’t realize this case is personal for the detectives . . .

THE ATMOSPHERE & SETTING

The characters, plot and writing were adequate. But the book hooked me with something else entirely: the feeling of it. It sucked me into a particular feeling that made the city of Vittoria come alive, with all its mournful, strange, rich nuances. The private griefs and pains that echo off the city’s public monuments and buildings. The way history permeates everything. How one is never far from the past: whether that’s the far past–the city’s infancy or medieval age–or one’s personal past, the rumors and reputations leftover from childhood that dog people throughout their adulthood.

It’s the same feeling I have when I read a legend or fairy tale, part mystical, part real, part something I can’t put into words. The atmosphere of the city is simultaneously festive (it’s a holiday) and terrified. The setting is rich with customs and legends, superstitions and celebrations, steeped in history dating back a thousand years or more. The atmosphere and setting combine to create a feeling that grasped me.

Yes, there are parts where Kraken has the wry-voiced humor so pervasive among fictional cops/investigators. Yes, there are action scenes, s*x scenes, and dialogue crackling with nuance (especially when Kraken goes head-to-head with the still-incarcerated Tasio). There are points where the syntax becomes hard to follow, as if it became tangled up in itself; this may be a translation issue.

But even so, I enjoyed the book. I felt like I was following a winding path through foggy fairy tale woods. Nothing is what it seems, no one is who they seem. Danger and hope feel equally possible around every turn. I was captivated by the story.

The Silence of the White City is recommended to mystery lovers who like a slower (but still intense) pace.
5 stars

Thanks to Knopf/Doubleday and Netgalley for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. I was not required to write a positive review. All opinions are my own.
13 people found this helpful
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I am anxiously awaiting the release of book two!

This novel is a masterpiece. It is set in the Basque town of Vitoria . The residents are gripped with terror. Twenty years ago, a series of ritualistic murders were committed in the town. The perpetrator, an identical twin, is arrested by his twin brother who was a policeman. After twenty years in jail, the criminal brother..Tasio..is about to be released from jail. Before he is released, similar ritualistic murders start again. Surely Tasio can not be committing these killings while still in jail.
Thus begins the unraveling of this enigma. The story is told in flashback form by the lead detective Kraken, as he lies in the hospital on life support. He has been shot in the head by the killer and is a day away from having his life support terminated.
This brief précis should provide an indication of the intrigue embedded in the novel. The prose can be lush in texture. The setting and culture add an additional layer of intrigue. The pace can seem meandering and certainly is not breakneck in development. Rather, the tension slowly builds to a crescendo that will leave the reader anticipating the next book.
11 people found this helpful
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Does anybody really read the book?

I was looking for audiobook for long car drives. Reading all reviews I bought the series- and I was stroke with horror and anger. Well, I have never seen such absurdly and badly constructed story (managed to get through 1st and half of 2nd book). Nothing in the plot makes you believe in the story, almost all is predictable, the numbers of cliches is reaching Mount Everest, characters are not convincing, motives are weak and- what is the deadliest sin, the language is bad and cold with no wit, no humour, no emotion. I do not want to offend the writer, there are good and bad stories but the book is one of the worst I have ever read. The issue I have is not with the bad book but with the number of great reviews- how that is possible? Or am I the only one complaining?
9 people found this helpful
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Amazing

I loved this book so much. It took me to another country and another city and the details were vivid. It's a seamless plot with strong characters. I love figuring out who did and I just couldn't. The end is shocking. Pick this up and enjoy this winner of a book. Happy reading!
3 people found this helpful
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Serial killer and Basque tradition

The Silence of the White City, by Eva García Sáenz is the English version of an amazing spanish thriller, El Silencio de la Ciudad Blanca, and the first part of the author trilogy of La Ciudad Blanca. However, it can be read as a standalone, with a definite ending. No cliffhanger or plot points left hanging.

This book has been a major bestseller in Spanish speaking countries, and rightfully so. It has been masterfully translated by Nick Caistor, who is to be lauded for this work. He took great care at keeping the spanish words relevant to basque culture and traditions, hence immersing the reader in the ambiance of the original book.

Now, for the story...

It is narrated by the main character, the inspector remembering his investigation, while lying in a coma from having been shot in the head by the perpetrator, with a few days left before they turn off his life support.

So, the novel doesn’t really begin with flowers and unicorns...

20 years ago, a series of ritualistic murders shook the small town of Vitoria to its core. Couple of bodies, each having one of their hand on the cheek of the other, were found poisoned. First, a couple of newborns, then a couple of 5 years old, a couple of 10 years old, and a couple of 15 years old. The bodies being left chronologically in places of cultural and archeological significance to the town.

In a shocking turn of events, detective Ignacio Ortiz de Zárate arrested his own twin brother, Tasio, a well known archeologist, host of a successful TV documentary series. The murders stopped, and Tasio was found guilty and jailed. The peculiar relationship between those twins is well developed throughout the book, and raise many questions at several points in the story.

20 years later, a few weeks before Tasio Ortiz de Zárate is to be released on parole, while he’s still in jail, inspector Unai « Kraken » López de Ayala and his partner, Estíbaliz Ruiz de Gauna, get to investigate the murder of two twenty years old, killed in the same ritualistic way than 20 years before. And it won’t stop there...

But, with Tasio still in jail, who is doing the killings ? A disciple he’s controlling from inside, a copycat, or was Tasio innocent all along ? That’s what Tasio pretends when he demands to see Kraken, in order to help him find the real killer, in a way reminiscent of « Silence of the Lambs » (but, updated for the times. Twitter is used and, funny trivia, the accounts and hashtags cited in the book really exist - check them)

While being a well crafted and gripping thriller, this novel also plunge us in the culture and the history of that basque town. We learn a lot about the traditions and the ways of the society there, and it is as fascinating as the mystery itself. This, and the cultural significance of the murder scenes, add a little feeling of « Da Vinci Code » on top of the « Silence of the Lambs » visits to Tasio. However, I’m not saying it’s copying those books in any way. It’s a totally legit and original story, well standing on its own.

Kraken and his partner are not your common inspectors, either. They have issues, and they cover each other backs as a consequence. Kraken is in grief over the loss of his pregnant wife two years prior, and has little regard for rules and orders, and Estìbaliz is coping with addiction and personal problems of her own. The book really give us a view in their personal lives, and all the characters, be it the main ones or their families, are well fleshed out, vivid, original, and feeling very authentic (even a sixty-something ethical hacker Kraken uses unofficially). This is world building of the highest level.

This book will give you heartburns, as the inspectors are in a constant race against time to protect and save the 25, 30, 35 years old etc... of Vitoria who could become the next victims, and solve the case before Tasio gets released from jail. Especially when Kraken himself turns fourty years old...

The very fast paced conclusion is adequately stunning, even if all the puzzle pieces were there, and the reader could have guessed the shocking truth. This reader, however, didn’t, and read the last pages with his mouth gaping in astonishement.

The conclusion is followed by an epilogue, letting us know we haven’t seen the last of La Ciudad Blanca. The next book in the series, The Rituals of Water (Los Ritos Del Agua), appears on the front page, and is sure to be released soon (the sooner, the better)

Thanks to Penguin Random House (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group - Vintage Crime/Black Lizard label) and Netgalley for the ARC provided in exchange for this unbiased review.
3 people found this helpful
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Soon Lost Interest

I read about half the book, then lost interest, skipping to the end to see "who done it." Anticlimatic, corny ending.

Pros
1. Somewhat interesting historical information about the Spanish city of Vitoria, though these tidbits often felt like they were squeezed into the plot line

Cons
1. Shallow character development centered around unhappy marriages, adulterous relationships, and stereotypic pathos
2. The unrealistic, predictable plot got boring
3. Written at about a 6th grade (12 yr old) reading level
2 people found this helpful
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Don’t miss this crime thriller!

Serial killers scare me to my bone! But I love to read crime novels about cults and serial killings. The Silence of the White City, first in the trilogy, originally published in Spanish is a hit among crime enthusiasts and translated fiction lovers like me. I read this just in time before the second book comes out in March, 2021.

The Old Chapel, 2016
Vitoria, Spain.
Officer Unai and his partner investigate a killing that is very similar in may ways to the serial killings that happened 20 years ago in Spain. But the killer was caught and just in time for his parole, killings start again. Did they capture the real killer? Is this killer a copy cat? Or does the killer have an apprentice? What do these murders have to do with rituals and historic places? - along with the detectives, the reader also paces to find the murderer/ritualistic serial killer!

Despite having a couple sleepless nights, I’m totally amazed by this book!! Just wow. I can firmly say True crime/Serial Killer enthusiasts would love this book. Its not just the killers & killings, we also get a psychological glimpse of what the detectives go through, their pov, their way of thinking! Its the whole package. Don’t miss this!

Thank you Knopf/double day for the arc in exchange for an honest review!
2 people found this helpful
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The characters weren't believable to me

This book wasn't bad, but I personally did not find it engaging. The dialog really felt stilted and somewhat stereotypical. I got through it but didn't feel like I wanted to root for anyone. I did add some new Spanish words to my vocabulary, so that was nice, but overall I had to force myself to finish reading it.

UPDATE: I was going to say that the book felt like a not-great translation. And in looking around more at it on Amazon, i see that it IS a translation, which explains a lot of why the dialog was strange.

Since i read on Kindle and just dive right in, I perhaps didn't front-load my reading experience with helpful information. i still didn't find it enjoyable, but I was glad to learn that what I suspected was the case.
1 people found this helpful
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Colorful, twisty mystery that transports you to Spain

In the beginning of this book Unai López de Ayala, alias the Kraken, lies in a coma. He has been shot by the serial killer who he was pursuing. The story unfolds backwards, then backwards and forwards again, mostly told from the Kraken’s viewpoint. The plot is twisty, just like the motives and methods of the killer. The compelling plot is almost eclipsed by the setting and culture of Vitoria, Spain, a city with heavily Basque influences and a heritage of medieval structures with a touch of the mystic and plenty of good food. Secondary characters include Unai’s female partner, his brother and grandfather, a set of accomplished, but eccentric twin brothers, hackers, Unai’s female superior, and stories about their pasts. The ending was a bit too neatly drawn, but in all, a colorful mystery well-worth the trip.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this title.
1 people found this helpful
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Expert twists and fascinating Basque setting

The story is told in flashback from the point of view of the detective who is in a coma after having been shot in the head by the serial killer he was chasing. It’s hard not to be hooked from the first chapter. The presence of twins was concerning at first--who hasn’t seen enough of twin-related gimmickry on bad TV shows?--but the author handles the twists and turns expertly and with originality. The sense of place is so strong in this engaging novel that I found myself looking things up online just to learn more about some of the cultural practices described. The idea of a cuadrilla, a largely unchanging cohort of friends who accompany you throughout life, is taken for granted in the novel but has no exact equivalent in American society. There are enough complications and interpersonal conflicts to keep even a jaded mystery fan glued to the story, and the richly detailed Basque setting makes reading this book feel like taking a trip.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for a digital advance review copy.
1 people found this helpful