Monday, March 5, 2012

Another World


The thing I like most about reading is that a good book can take you away to a different place and time. Teresa Mendoza -- the main character of The Queen of the South -- described it really appropriately. She said that you are changed somewhat every time you read a good book.

I read a lot, and I can really become absorbed in a good book. It can take me away; however, generally, the books I read take me to someplace that I can imagine being and with people I can imagine being with. The Queen of the South was altogether different.

This was a world I can’t imagine even existing, though I am certain it does. When you stop to think about it, every character in this book was despicable, caught up in a life that was cold and heartless and full of hate and drugs and remorseless killing. It is from this world, and from this cast of characters, that we had to choose our heroes and our villains.

It was really a very weird experience for me, but I became thoroughly caught up in Teresa’s story. I can’t say I ever became fond of her, but I was absorbed in her life. She was a girl with no family, save the mobsters and narcos with whom she lived. Patty became her sister. Oleg Yasikov became her father.

If I could put her in a different life, I might have liked her. I certainly admired her keen intelligence and the way she made something of herself – more than something, actually (keeping in mind the world in which she made something of herself). And, within her own sordid little world, she had scruples. She didn’t kill Pote Galvez for example, because he had been loyal (in his own weird way) to her boyfriend and hadn’t raped her. In fact, she made him her bodyguard, and he became utterly loyal to her. But imagine being able to have someone killed without even giving it a second thought. I don’t mean having the ability to do it. I mean having a conscience that would allow it.

The ending took me by surprise. At the beginning, I had theorized that Teresa had looked at the list that her boyfriend Guero Davila had told her to give to his godfather. But since it never really came up again (until the end), I sort of forgot about it. What I didn’t forget about, however, was my confusion about the telephone call that begins the entire book. I wondered all along who would have made that phone call. If that phone rang, it meant Guero was dead. But if his enemies killed him, then who would have called her? Voila! The answer became clear when it was revealed that Guero was an agent for the United States.

Keeping in mind that Teresa lived in an evil world, I must say nevertheless that I loved reading about her rich existence. I loved hearing about the clothes she wore and the house in which she lived, and the people with whom she surrounded herself. It’s hard to imagine having that much money.

I found Patty to be a very sad character. She loved Teresa so much that I think she really gave everything to her so that she could be happy. Then Patty herself, because she knew that Teresa would never love her back in the same way, tried to find happiness through cocaine and the fast life. I was very afraid that Teresa was going to have her killed, and I’m glad that didn’t happen, though her demise was sad enough.

Patty and Teresa. Aren’t those funny names for women in this particular world? They sound like 1950s cheerleaders.

I really liked the Russian mobster Yasikov. Again, funny to say that, since he also lived within this sordid world – killing people without a second thought. But he was so kind to Teresa.

When I started the book, I wasn’t sure I was going to like it. The author used a lot of words. But I found his writing caught me hook, line, and sinker into the world of the drug cartels. The first few sentences of the book created perhaps my favorite beginning of any book I have read. It didn’t take long before I was caught up in this book, despite its darkness.

I also thought that the transition back and forth from third person (the story of Teresa) and first person (the journalist’s gathering of facts) would be confusing. However, I found the transitions to be smooth, and provided a way for the journalist to tell the story of Teresa without having witnessed it himself. His interviewees told the story.

I will definitely read something else by Perez-Reverte. Perhaps the book The Club Dumas that I have had on my shelf for years..

2 comments:

  1. Wow, Kris....you are hard to follow.

    Hmmm......If someone asked me to rate this book I am not sure what I would give it. I liked parts of this book much more than others. I found myself reading quickly through the drug running descriptions...the planning and executing parts anyway. I was far more interested in the relationships. I read with interest every page of Teresa's incarceration and makeover.

    I usually enjoy a book because I connect with at least one character and really care what happens to him or her. While reading this book I felt a lack of that kind of connection and it was sometimes hard to pick up and get involved in. But....by the end of the book I was really proud of Teresa. Not because she was a good person, but because she had been very successful because of her instincts and will. She was a product of her environment and was somewhat destined to live in this world. I was impressed that she survived and rose to the top. I also liked that she did not lose herself in the drugs she transported.

    I also ended up liking her body guard a lot. I didn't realize this until he was dying. I guess I got so used to the drugs and illegal issues that I started to look past them to the basic character of the characters.

    I did not like the slimey attorney who Teresa had the relationship with but who was married and had a family. I was surprised, though, that Teresa could just have him killed after they had been as close as they had been. But....I was also surprised that he would double cross her for money that he did not need.

    I guess my final thought is that I am glad this was a book that is over and not part of my life.

    I did read Club Dumas. I think you shoiuld take a little break from this author and read it after something lighter. I read it just before starting this book and they were a bit too intense back to back.

    Oh...I also read The Bungalow. It was a book that Kristen Hannah would like, but probably a little better than one she would write.

    I am wondering if I am the only one who is posting a comment or if I am just having trouble finding any other posts. Didn't anyone else read this book? Was it just too overhwelming because of its size? You should have seen my copy....it was large print! I am looking forward to knowing what Becky thought of this book.

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  2. I was traveling for a week, so I apologize for this late post.

    I also enjoyed Queen of the South. Like Kris and Andrea, I certainly don’t glamorize the drug world. But, let’s face it, the Dark Side is interesting! I thought this was a pretty realistic view of the world: Yes, there is the possibility of earning huge amounts of money and living the high life (in more ways than one) for a while. But, the characters were pretty realistic about how they would end up—either dead or in jail.

    I wouldn’t say I had sympathy for Teresa, but I could understand why she got into that world. It’s easy for me to say I would never do such a thing as participate in the drug trade. But, I always had many options. In Teresa’s world, there weren’t any options. That’s not an excuse, but for me it makes it believable that people might make that decision, even if they weren’t inherently evil. Desperation causes many bad judgments.

    On the other hand, Patty had all the advantages of life, but she, too, chose to become involved in the drug traffic. I guess I sort of wrote her off as the “poor little rich girl” trying to generate some excitement in her life. That’s probably too simple. In a way, she also didn’t have many choices, because her place in life was as set as Teresa’s. It’s certain that she loved Teresa and made sure that she was set up for life.

    Yasikov was an interesting character. He didn’t think twice about having someone executed, but he also took good care of Teresa. And Pote Galvez was also likeable. Ok, for an assassin/drug runner! In the context of their world, the rules they lived under, they were loyal and faithful to Teresa. I would think that in a world like that, Teresa would be grateful that there were a couple of people she truly could count on.

    I’ve liked all of the books I’ve read by Perez-Reverte. I find them challenging and interesting. I didn’t know anything about Queen of the South, so I’m glad I had this motivation to read it.

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