At the end of the nineteenth century, Theo+a7phile Valance and his wife Suzanne sail into Santa Sofi+a7a, a remote Mexican copper-mining town. By the author of The Five Gates of Hell.
Rupert Thomson, (born November 5, 1955) is an English writer. He is the author of thirteen critically acclaimed novels and an award-winning memoir. He has lived in many cities around the world, including Athens, Berlin, New York, Sydney, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, and Rome. In 2010, after several years in Barcelona, he moved back to London. He has contributed to the Financial Times, the Guardian, the London Review of Books, Granta, and the Independent.
This was my first read of Rupert Thomson and I will definitely be looking for his other books. Perhaps I so enjoyed this book because it took place In Baja Calif Sur where I currently live, but I really feel his writing style was incredible. His descriptions took you right along with him and I loved how he wove Mexican folklore into the story. His characters were vividly alive, in fact we run into some of them here in Baja even now.
Official is 3 and a quarter so the upper 3s. Ok so i love this writer 2nd book of his. He is purely magical the way he transports you into another world. But this book tended to lose it sometimes. Not a good as his first. This would not stop me reading more and I still loved it. A mixed bag of greatness.
Very different than other books by Thomson I've read. I can definitely say the book had me anticipating what would happen next the whole time, although after finishing it, I can only reflect on it being kind of boring.
A well-written, if slightly overdescriptive, novel - not the sort of thing I usually read, but I found enough in this book to grow to like the main female protagonist (though couldn't agree with some of her choices). As rich as it was, I read it on a long journey and was able to get quite immersed in it - alas the ending was a touch confusing and unhappy. I'm not sure whether the author was intentionally vague or lacked focus, but it was a frustratingly flaky conclusion (which stayed with me as an irritant).
Rupert Thomson has attempted a huge range of styles in his career, to varied success. This historical romance, set in the scorching heat of the wild west is fantastic. Hugely evocative of a very harsh environment and ludicrously stuffy people. Beautiful.