Publisher's Weekly Review
Argentinian author Olguín makes his English-language debut with a scalding crime novel set in Buenos Aires, the first in a series featuring ambitious journalist Verónica Rosenthal, the 30-ish single daughter of a prominent judge. Verónica sees a potential story in the death of train driver Alfredo Carranza, who jumped off the roof of the building where he visited his psychologist. Alfredo was depressed "because he ran over four people in separate accidents." When the police decline to pursue what appears to be a straightforward suicide case, Verónica investigates. She learns of the suffering of other train drivers with similar experiences, including Alfredo's friend Lucio Valrossa, who's in his own "universe of pain" from six deaths by trains he was driving. What accounts for this high fatality rate? Her search for answers takes her into the city's poorest neighborhoods, where she discovers why slum boys are so willing to play chicken on railroad tracks. That Verónica has a torrid affair with the married Lucio complicates her quest. Olguín memorably explores the gulf between the haves and have-nots of Buenos Aires. Readers will hope to see more of the complex Verónica. (Oct.)
Kirkus Review
Young boys from poor families in Buenos Aires are being lured into lethal games of chicken on the railroad tracks. Investigating the story, dedicated magazine reporter Veronica Rosenthal faces threats of her own.The deadly games pit one boy against another. The last to jump away from the onrushing train to safety is paid 100 pesosthe equivalent of $2 American but a huge sum to these kids. The deaths have cast a pall on train travel, traumatizing drivers. One tormented engineer who also ran over three suicidal adults violently kills himself. Other drivers, including Lucio, who becomes Veronica's guide through this underworld, can't put aside their hatred for the victims for messing up the drivers' lives. Lucio, a married man who becomes Veronica's lover and partner in punishing sex, helps her track down the families of the young victimsand potential victims, including 10-year-old Peque. Accepted into a neighborhood soccer club by a coach out to program him as a train jumper, he survives his first bout and quickly spends the money on candy, chips, and Coke. Even after the deadliness of the game sinks in, he can't stay awayjust as Veronica can't stay away from Lucio and the emotional perils he represents. It takes a while to adjust to Olgun's flat narrative style and neutered tone, both of which may owe something to the translation. (Published in Spanish in 2012, this is the first of Olgun's novels to be translated into English.) But the story is so gripping and Veronica is such a fascinating departure from crime fiction conventionshe's 30, Jewish, brazen, and openly flawedthat the book becomes difficult to put down. Also a very good novel about journalism, it's the first installment of a trilogy.An unusual, intoxicating thriller from Argentina that casts deeper and deeper shadows. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Buenos Aires magazine reporter Veronica Rosenthal acts like a hard-boiled hero out of the pages of Black Mask: she inhales Jim Beam, falls all over men (who are happy to return the favor), and brims with contempt for an editor whose manner shifts ""between smug and obsequious depending on who he was talking to."" Too bad this salty sleuth has to appear in a novel that gives her only intermittent opportunities to shine. Olguín's Argentina-based crime story displays, for good or ill, the notion that the characters' milieu is as interesting as the characters. The plot is fascinating: bored kids playing ""chicken on the tracks,"" standing on a rail as the express roars up, with the winner being the last to jump free. Occasionally, one ""exploded into a thousand pieces,"" and Rosenthal gets wind of gangster money pushing this awful business. But the exploration of the kids' sad lives gets in the way of the mystery. Still, this wider-focus approach to crime fiction definitely has its fans, and this book is for them.--Don Crinklaw Copyright 2010 Booklist