Wednesday, 9 September 2015

Tatuaje – Manuel Vázquez Montalbán



Ah, Pepe Carvalho! The secret agent every man wishes he could be: CIA-trained, communist-inspired and food-loving.

What makes him different from everyone else isn’t so much his professional skills (Maigret’s got them too), or the gourmet recipes Montalbán inserts in his novels (Camilleri – and his aptly named Commissario Montalbano – do an equally good, if not even better, job of that), or the intriguing plots he has to unravel.

What makes his stories so great is his entourage: Charo, the prostitute he loves (and from whom he is loved back), Biscuter, his side-kick, helper and chef, and Bromuro, the shoeshiner/informer who is terrified of the government’s apparent schemes to put bromide (bromuro in Spanish) in the Spanish waters to placate the population’s sexual drive.

This is the second book in which the figure of Pepe Carvalho appears, but it’s the first time we see his entourage, and because of this it gets the nod as my favourite Carvalho story.

I almost forgot a crucial part. Carvalho doesn’t use wood for his fireplace: he burns books, something that makes every reader cringe and probably simultaneously bow in admiration at the boldness of the gesture.

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