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The Shamshine Blind
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Bretnie
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rated it 4 stars
Dec 07, 2023 07:01PM

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This is such a fresh new take on an alternate history - at any rate, it felt fresh to me, I've never read a book in which Argentina won against Great Britain in the Falkland Islands and was the new global super power. The author is Argentinean and so was able to add a lot of authentic little details such as the type of beer served in diners. Argentina took over Britain, and is a presence in the USA, but not an occupying force. During the war all of the major USA cities were bombed with a psychotropic substance that made these areas unlivable, so everyone moved to smaller cities like Daly City in CA, where this is set.
Pardo wrote this as a neo-noir murder mystery, and it did take me a little while to get used to some of the style, at first it felt campy and forced. I don't know if I got used to it or if her writing just became more natural later in the book.
Like a lot of noir mysteries, there are many leads that send the investigators off on tangential tasks, and it's easy to get confused and forget what the main mystery is, but that's part of the style. It is a "blind" after all - the bad guy set up one crime to cover for another one.

I had a possibly irrational reaction to the first page - it just looked like too many words, too close together. I must have been overwhelmed by the number of library books I brought home that day (11) and lashed out at a poor, innocent book. And I love the story line. I'm going back to get it!

LOL btdt. I'm glad you're giving it another chance. I hope it finds some fans here.

LOL btdt. I'm glad you're giving it another chance. I hope it finds some fans here."
I'm going to try it on audio. If it doesn't work, I'll go back to the print, since audio depends on the narrator almost more than the book for me.


Great to hear! I love speculative noir, Ben H Winters is a favorite of mine. Also, Lauren Beukes' earlier books, esp. Zoo City

I love Winters & Beukes, also (I'm reading Bridge right now!) and I loved Shamshine - you may like it a lot more when you try again

I love Winters & Beukes, also (I'm reading Bridge ..."
How are you liking Bridge? I almost picked it up on Black Friday, but didn't after seeing a couple middling reviews.

I'm about 30% of the way in, and so far I'm liking it better than her last book (Afterland). It's a page turner, it's creepy, it's confusing, it's immersive, it's weird, it's even a little bit gross at times. I like some of the characters, but I'm not really feeling it with others. I was having a hard time understanding Bridge's motivation for what she was doing, but it just suddenly became clear. I have NO idea where this is going, so it could end up feeling like a huge waste of time, or it could be amazing.
It's not as creepy as Broken Monsters (but really what COULD be that creepy??) - out of her past books, I'd say it's most similar to Moxyland in feel.

I was disappointed the Beukes later books went in directions I was too scared to follow - I have Broken Monsters, but not the courage to crack it open ;) Sounds like I might come back to her with this one.....

I was disappointed the ..."
I read a lot of "light" horror and Broken Monsters was beyond what I was okay with. If I had known in advance, I would have skipped that one. (COMPLETELY off topic here, but ... Stephen Graham Jones does that to me, too - I love most of his books, but every once in a while I read one that is just BEYOND gruesome, and I start to wonder if I need to stop reading his stuff.)


One horror book I loved this year was Fever House by one of my favorite authors, Keith Rosson. I'm sure it would be considered 'light' horror. His first book, Smoke City blew me away to such a degree that I'll follow him anywhere.


phew!! I'm glad you gave it a second try!



I, too, am struggling with this one in audio. The narration is good, so I don’t think it’s a problem with the audio. I don’t think I’d like it better in print, though I could be wrong. I am not a fan of noir, and this one seems to move particularly slowly. The plot is pretty convoluted, and while I can follow it all, I’m finding that I don’t really care about what’s happening.

I pictured Stephanie Beatriz (à la Det. Rosa Diaz in Brooklyn 99) as the main character and had so much fun rooting for her. I do appreciate good noir though, so YMMV.

I pictured Stephanie Beatriz (à ..."
I love the Rosa Diaz comparison! Totally agree.

LOL I think I pictured her as a lot more average, and I would have loved this book even more if I'd thought of Stephanie Beatriz!!!! And I do think that's probably the image the author was going for.

I'm not a fan of speculative fiction, but the world-building here was of one close enough to be recognizable and it was integral to the plot of the crimes. I am a fan of crime fiction. This isn't noir, but maybe noir adjacent? In any case, a fun crime caper with some interesting ideas that worked.
This will be a fun book to discuss and a hard decision as it goes up against another book I liked.



Risa, please update if you do! I wasn’t going to read this till seeing recent comments. Now I’m tempted, but our taste is similar so if you’re not liking this I’m guessing I won’t either. (I do like Ben H. Winters, though. Not wow’d by his prose, but his stories are so fun.)


That being said, I live in SF and can pretty much see Daly City from my window so that element is funny to me.


but that's why it was set in Daly City! Because the more "important" and popular cities were bombed, leaving only the lesser known cities safe to live in. I thought that was a brilliant touch. I mean, who ever thinks of Daly City?? Like you say, it's a place to get through. Unless you're in an alternate history universe where places like San Francisco were bombed, so the capital moves to Boise and Daly City becomes a major metropolis ...

Yes you had to accept that the bombs had a finite reach and the border of livable and not livable was RIGHT THERE.


Books mentioned in this topic
Fever House (other topics)Smoke City (other topics)
Zoo City (other topics)
The Shamshine Blind (other topics)