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Havana Twist

Havana Twist

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $39.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Sorry, A. Reader
Review: "A. Reader"'s comments, and those of some others here, have made me want to read some of Lia Matera's other books. Surely they must be better than Havana Twist, whose writing is pedestrian at best (the description of the Havana waterfront and other landmarks I'm familiar with are spectacularly leaden and dull, and the characterization was unrealistic at best: what a bunch of bozos, legally speaking, her protagonists were), to inspire such unthinking loyalty.

While Mr. or Ms. "Reader" assures us she or he knows Cuba by drifting away from the tourist zones and can vouch for Matera (despite the efforts of sinister taxi drivers), I've visited Cuba about 20 times over the past seven years and have spent more time with open and avowed dissidents than "A. Reader" has spent altogether in Cuba. The statements referring to me by name, impugning my motives on easily provable false grounds, and posted anonymously, might be considered libelous in some contexts, if anybody was infantile enough to give them credence.

My failure to describe Matera's undescriptive description of Mexico City -- and its laws -- where I've lived for a decade -- was due to my intent not to bore potential readers.

I did very much like Martin Cruz Smith's Cuba-based mystery -- which was no more favorable to Cuba, and somewhat outdated, but vastly better written -- and recommend that anybody purchase it from Amazon.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Confused local color
Review: Havana Twist is one of those mysteries that drenches itself in local color. Unfortunately, Matera finds herself drenched in fatal, often hilarious mistakes.

The book reads strongly as if she's admirably decided to abide by U.S. travel regulations and never visited Cuba, choosing instead to research though books. Havana Twist contains a bewildering array of contradictory descriptions seemingly taken from different periods of recent Cuban history.

That might not matter except that she makes her descriptions of Cuba and her character's paranoia in the atmosphere there central to the development of the plot.

She describes the action as occurring perhaps a decade after the start of Castro's final hour; a period that started in about 1988-89, putting the book firmly in the present.

Astonishingly, laughably, she describes Cubans fleeing from tourists. Since I started (legally) visiting Cuba in about 1992, tourists have been swarmed by Cubans.

She depicts Chinese soldiers lurking everywhere. In about 18 trips over the past few years, I've never heard that, nor have I heard dissidents or diplomats mention such a thing.

She portrays a Cuba of empty, darkened streets, bereft of gasoline. That would have been true in about 1992-94. But in the past few years, anybody has been able to buy gasoline, the streets are even sometimes clogged, and power outages have sharply dimished.

She has Willa Jansson, who must be a pitiful attorney, think that by paying a hotel in Mexican pesos she is avoiding U.S. spending restrictions. She might check Treasury on that.

She seems to think the plastic bodied Moskvich is the principle form of automotive transport. Bizarre. There are a few metal-bodied version of that car around but the Russian Lada is vastly more prevalent and is probably now outnumbered by Japanese cars, Fiats and Peugeots. I've never heard of anybody renting a Moskvich, as she has characters do. And did she ever see sparking lights on Cubana flights? The airline tends to use modern planes chartered from European companies.

She has American journalists unable to get visas. Mainstream U.S. reporters have visited routinely, on cuban granted journalists visas, for many years now. Not everybody can get in, but the wire agencies she describes surely can. Check for havana datelines in databases.

By the way, how did Jansson's boyfriend carry a gun through U.S. and Mexican airport searches?

I've been flying out of Mexico for years and haven't noticed any charred Cubana planes lately.

There are more than 1 million tourists -- the largest number from Canada and many from the United States -- visiting each year. Jansson's fear of standing out as a tourist -- in HAVANA? -- is hilarous.

I could go on, and on, and on.

If she's going to use local paranoia and atmosphere as plot elements, they ought to seem credible.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: This book should be called "Lemon Twist" as it a real LEMON.
Review: I am a big Lia Matera fan and have been reading her for years and this is the first time I have been disappointed in one of her books. The plot is so convoluted and implausible and the characters so poorly developed that I had a hard time remembering who was who and how they were connected. Had very little to do with law and nothing to do with her being a lawyer. Also, her mother is one of my favorite characters and she hardly appears at all in the book. Think she should stick to venues in and around the San Francisco Bay Area which she appears to really know about. I would suggest that you give this one a miss,

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A decent mystery!
Review: I liked it, though it was like I had read it some where else, it was still good!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A very good and very funny book!
Review: I loved Havana Twist! Matera has a very funny and sparkling writing style, bringing the locations and the characters to life. Most of her Willa Jansson books are set in San Francisco, where I grew up, and they are fantastic for local detail. A Canandian friend of mine who's been to Cuba was reading this book when he visited me over the holidays. He loved the descriptions of Havana, and he kept quoting lines to me half the night. To tell the truth, I had hesitated about ordering this one because a couple of fan reviews here on amazon made it sound not as good as the others in the series. But I'm really glad my friend made me want to order a copy. I thought this book was as every bit as funny and good if not better than other ones in the series--and that's saying a lot. I've never written a review for amazon before, but I wanted to say I definitely completely agree with the positive reviews here and strongly disagree with the negative ones. And so does my friend in Vancouver, who's been to Cuba several times. This book is a real page-turner, and Matera really makes you feel like you're right there. And some of her lines are so hilarious you want to phone somebody just to read them aloud. I recommend it very highly.

A fan in Portland

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best in an outstanding series of mysteries
Review: I was delighted to have the chance to once again visit with bright and funny Willa. Matera constructs a believable reason for her amateur sleuthing through the complex world of Cuban socio- politics and then spins a wonderful, complex mystery that involves Mexico and the U.S. as well, and is, in each place, thoroughly engaging. Lia Matera writes witty, smart mysteries and this is one of her best.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Laughed out loud at times, but didn't breath until the end.
Review: I've read this novel twice now, and each time I found it fresh, funny and intrigueing. There is something wonderful about Willa plodding through Cuba trying to solve the mystery of her missing mother. Many of the other Jansson books seemed to lack developed sub-characters, but with Willa's parents, her beau and all of Cuba to choose from, this was first rate reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hooray! Willa's back!!
Review: Lia Matera's lawyer-sleuth, Willa Jansson, is one of my favorite characters in contemporary fiction because she's intelligent, has a unique moral center, and can be counted on to offer the clever aside that puts everything in perspective. And in HAVANA TWIST, she finds herself in a situation that shows off all her best qualities. I've read every one of Matera's books and love them all. An adventure with Willa Jansson always opens the world for me and introduces me to situations or places or ways of thinking that I hadn't known about before. Matera's a brilliant writer who can paint a culture like Castro's sad and much-diminished Cuba so vividly I can see the ruined houses, the streets and markets, the workers who toil there. When Willa's socialist-activist mother fails to return from a trip to that island, Willa follows every shred of a clue and finds herself confronted with increasingly hostile reactions from local officials. Brave but not foolish, she doesn't give up her search, even after she's expelled from the country. I was engrossed in this book I didn't notice that afternoon had turned to evening while I was following Willa down twisty streets, across dusty roads, and into the heart of a story that compelled me to keep reading. I highly recommend this entertaining and thoughtful book from an intelligent and clever writer.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: consorting with the enemy
Review: maverick lawyer,willa jansson, travels to post-soviet cuba in search of her peacenik mother. more of a missing person detective story than legal fiction. insightful description of deprivation and surveillance in an aging dictatorship with developing ties to red china.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A brilliant storyteller who imbues her work with creativity
Review: Most daughters would be angry at their mothers for nagging them about getting married or finding a better job, but not Willa Jansson. She would welcome such demands instead of being accused of selling out to the establishment by becoming a lawyer. June Jansson is to the left of Karl Marx. She is an activist who has been arrested so many times her family has lost count.

When June and thirteen other women, working for the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, protest overseas, a humdrum Willa acts nonchalant. However, Willa becomes very concerned when her mother fails to return to the states with her companions.

Willa flies to Cuba (via Mexico City) to find her mother, but there is no trace of June anywhere. The two reporters who promised to help her have also disappeared. Willa continues to poke her nose into places where she is definitely persona non grata until she is escorted out of the country by the Castro government. Six months pass until information finally surfaces about June. Willa and a friend risk their lives by entering Cuba in an effort to rescue her mother.

HAVANA TWIST truly lives up to its name. The novel has so many plot twists and countless misdirections, most readers will not figure out what is going on even though all the clues are out in the open for all to see. Lia Matera brilliantly makes the clues seem like trivial tidbits rather than vital information. The examination of the socio-political situation in Cuba and the American policy towards that island country makes for authenticity and great reading. Ms. Matera demonstrates that she is an ingenious storyteller who can combine a first rate mystery with a political thriller into an entertaining package.

Harriet Klausner


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