THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
iBookKindlePrintReviews

The Dead Women of Juárez

2 Mins read

Written by Sam Hawken — It’s a tough sell setting a crime fiction book against a backdrop of real life horrors without coming across as sensationalist or trivial. But this is precisely what Sam Hawken attempts to do in his first book, The Dead Women of Juárez, and pulls it off fantastically.

The real life horror in question takes place in the Mexican city of Juárez, just across the border from the United States. It is famous for two things. Firstly, it’s a magnet for multinational companies seeking cheap, mainly female, labour. Secondly, since 1993 as many as 5000 women have been murdered there and no one has been brought to justice.

Hawken inserts into this picture the fictional character of Kelly Courter, a washed up, junkie boxer who makes a living as a punching bag for younger, hungrier Mexican fighters. As a sideline, he traffics and sells drugs for Esteban, his friend and the brother of Kelly’s on-again-off-again girlfriend and women’s rights activist, Paloma.

Kelly is in self-imposed exile in Juárez, escaping the legal and moral consequences of a fatal mistake, the details of which we learn about much later on in the book. It’s a day-by-day struggle to survive in a tough town, constantly being shadowed by grizzled Mexican narcotics cop, Sevilla, apparently intent on busting Kelly for his illegal activities.

Hawken introduces the horror of what is happening in Juarez with a slow burn, not a bang, through the posters of missing women on telegraph poles and the fear of women on the street. I can’t say much more without giving the story away. Paloma disappears and Kelly comes off a major drug binge to discover he is the prime suspect. His fate is in the hands of Sevilla, a man with secrets and ghosts of his own, in many ways as much as stranger in Mexico as Kelly.

Hawken’s writing is sparse and basic. His bio says he is a Texas native. If so he must have spent time in Mexico because his depiction of the violence, poverty and fleeting beauty of the country feels like it can only have come from first hand exposure.

The book has its problems. In particular, the ending felt too quick and forced. But these don’t distract from its many strengths. The Dead Women of Juárez is a gritty, gripping noir. Like the best crime fiction, it is also holds a mirror to some pretty horrific realities and a fight for justice that shows no sign of being won anytime soon. If this is what Hawken does with his first novel, I’m looking forward to his next.

Serpent’s Tail
Print/Kindle/iBook
£3.59

CFL Rating: 4 Stars


1 Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
KindlePrintReviews

Murder in the Scottish Highlands by Dee MacDonald

Bed, breakfast and… butchery? It’s not exactly what Ally McKinley had in mind when she decamped from Edinburgh to run a guesthouse in the picturesque village of Locharran in the Scottish Highlands, but she soon discovers that murder and the solving thereof offer a great…
KindlePrintReviews

Last Night at Villa Lucia by Simon McCleave

What could be more appealing than a murder mystery set in an elegant villa high on a hill overlooking the Tuscan countryside? Prolific crime novelist Simon McCleave’s Last Night at Villa Lucia feels like a vacation from the first page, as the villa’s English owner…
KindlePrintReviews

Correction Line by Craig Terlson

The new edition of Canadian author Craig Terlson’s Correction Line underscores how badly off track a person can get if they just keep doing what they’re doing. The ‘correction line’ of the title refers to the late-19th century project to survey and divide the Canadian…
Crime Fiction Lover