Brand-new stories by: Leonardo Padura, Pablo Medina, Alex Abella, Arturo Arango, Lea Aschkenas, Moises Asis, Arnaldo Correa, Mabel Cuesta, Yohamna Depestre, Michel Encinosa Fu, Mylene Fernandez Pintado, Carolina Garcia-Aguilera, Miguel Mejides, Achy Obejas, Oscar F. Ortiz, Ena Lucia Portela, Mariela Varona Roque, and Yoss.
To most outsiders, Havana is a tropical sin city: a Roman ruin of sex and noise, a parallel universe familiar but exotic, and embargoed enough to serve as a release valve for whatever desire or pulse has been repressed or denied. Habaneros know that this is neither new--long before Havana collapsed during the Revolution's Special Period, all the way back to colonial times, it had already been the destination of choice for foreigners who wanted to indulge in what was otherwise forbidden to them--nor particularly true.
In the real Havana--the lawless Havana that never appears in the postcards or tourist guides--the concept of sin has been banished by the urgency of need. And need--aching and hungry--inevitably turns the human heart darker, feral, and criminal. In this Havana, crime, though officially vanquished by revolutionary decree, is both wistfully quotidian and personally vicious.
In the stories of "Havana Noir, " current and former residents of the city--some international sensations such as Leonardo Padura, others exciting new voices like Yohamna Depestre--uncover crimes of violence and loveless sex, of mental cruelty and greed, of self-preservation and collective hysteria.
Achy Obejas is the award-winning author of "Days of Awe, Memory Mambo, " and "We Came all the Way from Cuba So You Could Dress Like This?" Her poems, stories, and essays have appeared in dozens of anthologies. A long-time contributor to the Chicago Tribune, she was part of the 2001 investigative team that earned a Pulitzer Prize for the series, "Gateway to Gridlock." Currently, she is the Sor Juana Writer-in-Residence at DePaul University in Chicago. She was born in Havana. Praise for "Havana Noir: " Miami Herald, 11/25/07 Sewer-dwelling dwarves who run a black market. An engineer moonlighting as a beautician to make ends meet. Street toughs pondering existentialism. An aging aristocrat with an unsolvable dilemma. A Chinese boy bent on avenging his father's death.
These are the characters you will meet in this remarkable collection, the latest edition of an original noir series featuring stories set in a distinct neighborhood of a particular city. Throughout these 18 stories, current and former residents of Havana -- some well-known, some previously undiscovered -- deliver gritty tales of depravation, depravity, heroic perseverance, revolution and longing in a city mythical and widely misunderstood.
This is noir of a different shade and texture, shadowy and malevolent, to be sure, but desperate, too, heartbreakingly wounded, the stories linked more by the acrid pall of a failed but seemingly interminable experiment than by genre. Ambiguities abound, and ingenuity flourishes even as morality evaporates in the daily struggle for self-preservation.
In this dark light the best of these stories are also the most disturbing. What For, This Burden by Michel Encinosa Fu, a resident of Havana, is a brutal and wrenching tale of brothers involved in drug deals and child prostitution; they peddle their own sister. The Red Bridge, by Yoss, another Havana resident, depicts a violent incident in the lives of two friends with apparently great potential who, though acutely aware of the depravity of their situation, are powerless or unwilling to extract themselves from the mean streets of El Patio.
Cuban engineer Mariela Varona Roque's offering, The Orchid, is a short but powerful tale of the demise of a young boy frequently entrusted to the care of a browbeaten neighbor obsessed with his solitary orchid.
Isolation, poverty and despair even in the midst of friends and family, lead to unthinkable cruelty, a common thread in these and other stories. But just as prevalent are resilience, hope, honor and ferocious devotion to the island. Pablo Mendina's Johnny Ventura's Seventh Try centers on the oft-repeated theme of getting to La Yuma, the United States. After six failures a man succeeds in building a boat sturdy enough to safely cross the Straits, only to find himself turning in circles in excruciating angst once out of the water.
Alone in a decaying building overlooking the Malecon, a woman in Mylene Fernandez Pintado's The Scene sustains a semblance of quiet elegance for her dying mother. Then she's free but decides to stay on the island rather than join her brother in San Francisco. And in Carolina Garcia-Aguilera's beautifully rendered The Dinner, an elderly gentleman, his wife and a servant who hasn't been paid in 40 years agonize in their crumbling, once elegant mansion, over their inability to find the ingredients for an annual dinner for friends. With faint echoes of The Gift of the Magi and perfectly bridging the pre- and post-revolution days, the story is achingly splendid.
Several murder stories, including one about an arrogant serial killer egged on by a woman he phones to brag about his exploits, and a film-noir style piece featuring a San Francisco private eye sent to bring out a thrill-seeking rich kid on the eve of the revolution, round out the collection and justify its place in the series.
But if you're looking for slick, moody, detective noir, sunsets, mojitos at La Florida, or dancing girls at La Tropicana, you won't find them in "Havana Noir." Along with grit and pluck and the disintegration of structure and values, there is an overarching sadness to these stories as evidenced by perhaps the most disturbing commonality: repeated loveless, disconnected sex, including rape and incest, but more often just mindless, pleasureless consensual copulation, all that's left to fill the time while waiting for something to change. Sout
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本小说读起来简直就像是坠入了一个迷宫,每一个转角都藏着令人窒息的秘密。作者对环境的描摹简直是教科书级别的,那种潮湿、闷热,混合着烟草和陈旧朗姆酒气味的空气仿佛都能透过纸页扑面而来。故事的节奏把握得极其精准,不是那种快节奏的追逐,而是一种缓慢、沉重的压抑感,像是有什么东西一直在水面下潜伏,随时准备将你拖入深渊。主角的内心世界刻画得尤其深刻,他那种游走在道德边缘的挣扎、对过去的愧疚以及对未来的迷茫,都让人感同身受。我特别喜欢其中对某些次要角色的处理,即使只是几笔勾勒,那些人物的形象也栩栩如生,带着独特的口音和复杂的心思,让人忍不住想深挖他们的背景故事。整本书弥漫着一种颓废的美感,那种在光影交错中展现出的拉丁风情和犯罪的冰冷内核形成了强烈的张力,使得阅读体验非常独特,读完后很长一段时间,我仿佛都还沉浸在那座虚构的城市里,无法自拔。
评分老实说,我一开始对这种设定题材有点提不起兴趣,总觉得是老生常谈的黑色电影复刻,但翻开第一章后,我立刻改变了看法。这本书的叙事手法极其大胆,它频繁地在不同时间线之间跳跃,像打碎的玻璃片一样,需要读者自己去拼凑出完整的画面。起初确实有点费劲,我甚至需要时不时回头确认一下“现在”是哪一年,但正是这种挑战性,让最终真相浮现时的那种“啊哈!”的顿悟感达到了顶峰。作者的文笔干净利落,没有多余的形容词堆砌,所有的情感张力都通过对话和场景的冷峻呈现出来。尤其是一些审讯场景,对话短促、充满机锋,每一个停顿都暗藏玄机。它探讨的主题也很有深度,关乎忠诚、背叛,以及在权力结构下个体命运的无力感,远超一般的侦探小说范畴,更像是一部关于人性的寓言。
评分说实话,这本书的结构有点像一部精密的钟表,每一个齿轮——每一个配角、每一个小小的意外——都必须精确地咬合在一起,才能驱动最终的结局。我特别欣赏作者对“不可靠叙述者”手法的运用。我们看到的这个世界,是通过一个满是缺陷、自我欺骗的主角过滤后的景象,这使得读者不得不时刻保持警惕,质疑眼前所见是否就是事实的全部。这种不确定性带来的紧张感,比直接的暴力冲突更摄人心魄。我花了好大力气才跟上作者的思路,特别是那些关于家族恩怨和陈年旧案的穿插描述,信息量巨大。不过,一旦你接受了这种叙事节奏,你会发现它非常过瘾。它展现的不是正义战胜邪恶的童话,而是在灰色地带生存所必须付出的代价,非常写实,甚至有些残酷。
评分我很少读到能将异域风情与硬汉派侦探完美融合的作品。这本书的魅力就在于它的层次感,你以为你在看一个简单的寻人故事,结果却揭开了一张巨大的政治阴谋网。里面的地道战、秘密接头、隐藏的地下酒吧文化,都描绘得细致入微,让人感觉仿佛有一位非常了解当地历史和街头智慧的向导在带领你探秘。人物之间的化学反应也极其出色,无论是主角与那位神秘女郎之间的暧昧拉扯,还是他与老搭档之间那种心照不宣的默契与嫌隙,都处理得微妙而真实。它不是那种让你读完后拍案叫绝、情感爆发的作品,而是更像一杯陈年的烈酒,后劲十足,需要时间去回味。每一个细节,比如墙上的斑驳的涂鸦,或者某首歌谣的歌词,似乎都在暗示着某种更深层的含义,非常适合喜欢反复推敲的读者。
评分这本书的氛围营造到了一个令人发指的地步。我几乎可以闻到那些老旧天花板上渗出的霉味,感受到头顶吊扇缓慢而无力的转动。作者对光线的运用尤其高明,大部分场景都笼罩在黄昏或深夜的阴影中,象征着人物们心照不宣的秘密和未被解决的道德困境。与那些强调动作和对白的黑色小说不同,这部作品的重点似乎放在了“等待”上——等待一个线索,等待一个电话,等待命运的判决。这种慢节奏的心理刻画,让角色的内心活动变得无比清晰可见,他们的恐惧、他们的希望,都如同被置于显微镜下。读到中间部分,我感觉自己也变成了一个躲在暗处观察的幽灵,见证着这一切无可挽回的悲剧发生。它不是一部能让你轻松消遣的作品,它需要你全身心的投入和解读,但回报是巨大的,因为它触及到了人性的最深处那些不愿被触碰的角落。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈图书下载中心 版权所有