Different as they are, the Varela brothers are bound by a decades-old secret surrounding the events of one long-ago night during their childhood back home in their native Belize. Today Patrick is the Miami-Dade County commissioner and a probable candidate for mayor of Miami, while his brother, Leo, a?sometime poet and mental health worker, spends more time getting high than anything else. Still, they've both been struggling for years to completely sever their ties to their father, his illegal businesses, and his secrets. But those years?quickly vanish the moment?an?old friend?recently released from prison asks Leo to release a patient from the mental hospital where Leo works.?He calls it a favor, but the threat is clear to Leo, Patrick, and---more dangerously---the men?with a stake in Patrick's political career. The request sets off a chain of events destined to lay bare once and for all the truth about what happened that night, and maybe even to pit brother against brother in their efforts to finally set things right. Moody, atmospheric, and evocative, Lonesome Point showcases the distinct and rhythmic voice that?makes Ian Vasquez a unique talent among today's crime writers.
Creatures from the Belize Lagoon: Noir Mysteries from an Emerging New Belizean Talent Reviews of Ian Vasquez' In the Heat and Lonesome Point By LAN SLUDER An important new talent has emerged out of the sands, swamps and condos of Florida, bringing a Belizean edge to crime novels some are calling Caribbean Noir. Ian Vasquez, who was raised in Belize and now lives in the Tampa Bay area, where he is a copy editor at the St. Petersburg Times, has published two novels, In the Heat in 2008 and Lonesome Point in 2009. A third, Mr. Hooligan, is set for publication in summer 2010. In the Heat is set entirely in Belize, mostly in Belize City with some of the action taking place at a jungle lodge in Cayo. Miles Young, an aging boxer coming off a loss of a bout at Bird's Isle, is hired to find the run-away 17-year-old daughter of Isabelle Gilmore, a wealthy, Caribbean Shores matron. The girl has taken a gob of mom's ill-gotten cash and is with the son of a former Belize police chief, now a well-connected owner of a Belize City security company. Soon, Miles is caught up in a tangled web of murder, corruption and money laundering. "Man, Belize was going to hell in a hand basket," says Manny, a shady boxing promoter. Vasquez' second novel, Lonesome Point, takes place in Miami and Tampa, with flashbacks to Belize. Two Belizean brothers, Leo and Patrick Varela, though still bound together by a deadly family secret of their youth in Belize City, have drifted apart since they moved to South Florida. Patrick is a successful attorney and Miami-Dade County commissioner, with a beautiful home and trophy family in Biscayne Bay, while Leo is a would-be poet and night shift worker on a dead-end job in a hospital psych ward. One night, a figure out of Leo's Belizean past shows up and demands a favor of him: Get a patient, an old man with apparent schizophrenia, out of isolation to take a middle-of-the-night meeting. If Leo doesn't cooperate, things that happened at Lonesome Point in Belize may be brought to light. Soon, Leo is in the middle of a nightmare, on the run from his Belizean past, desperately trying to save the life of his pregnant girlfriend, the patient, and himself. Leo is hunted by his one-time Belizean pal, Freddy, along with Bernard, a hulking, 290-pound black weightlifter, and perhaps even by his brother Patrick. I came to the two novels with the wrong expectations. Misled by blurbs comparing Vasquez to John D. McDonald, I was expecting Travis McGee transplanted to Belize. But Vasquez is his own man. Unlike the stories featuring McGee, Spenser, Marlowe, Millhone and some of the other classic heroes of mystery and crime fiction, Vasquez' tales are told in the third person, with omniscient narrators. His main characters are accidental detectives, rather than professionals. Instead of boldly forging ahead, like skiffs on the Caribbean, they are often buffeted by the winds of chance. Lonesome Point, to be sure, is the more powerful of the two books
Reviewed for Midwest Book Review
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Leo Valera works the night shift on a psychiatric ward but his real passion is poetry. Leo's brother Patrick is commissioner for Miami-Dade County with plans to run for mayor in the upcoming election. The two brothers are polar opposites: Leo is lackadaisical and prefers to spend time smoking pot and composing poems while Patrick is aggressive and ambitious and will do anything to accomplish his goals. Leo's girlfriend is pregnant and he knows he needs to do something more with his life but isn't motivated. Patrick, married to Leo's former girlfriend, is as content as Leo to keep their relationship at a distance. Both brothers share one thing in common: escaping the vile secrets from their past which will undo them if revealed. When Freddie Robinson, a friend from their childhood, shows up where Leo works and tries to coerce Leo into releasing one of the patients, Leo reaches out to his brother for help, not realizing this is the first step for the two brothers in a sequence of events leading them back to their past and the demons they have tried to elude. Ian Vasquez writes with an interesting style, drawing the reader in with his flowing cadence wrapped around a fast-paced plot filled with mystery and suspense. Character development is superb. Leo, the quintessential underachiever, is forced to take a serious look at his life and choose whether to remain uninvolved or become the man he should have been. Patrick's true character is revealed when he is confronted with having to decide what matters most: family or career. Dialogue stands out, especially with the secondary characters, who add an extra dimension to this engaging thriller.
Can't wait...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Haven't read this yet, but I read "In the heat" the debut from this author. I enjoyed that and will be buying this book as well....
Fast-paced, exciting mystery
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Vasquez demonstrates his excellent talent for storytelling in the novel, Lonesome Point. Set in his native Belize and also in Miami, Vasquez weaves a suspenseful story of two brothers haunted by a terrible secret from their past. He creates fascinating and multidimensional characters in a story that moves swiftly. I highly recommend this book.
"Memories were long and difficult and always lying in wait."
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Scribbling poetry and toking on a joint, Leo Varela has few expectations in his life other than a nowhere job as a mental health tech at Jefferson Memorial Hospital for indigents and a pregnant girlfriend who makes him happy. The past is left behind, dead and buried at Lonesome Point in Belize, where brothers Patrick and Leo grew up in the shadow of Ivan Varela's shady used car dealership. Now Patrick is Miami-Dade County Commissioner and considering a run for mayor. The two brothers couldn't be more different and both are content with the distance that defines their relationship. Unfortunately the past arrives at Leo's job in the person of Freddy Robinson, a former acquaintance in Belize and ex-con who harbors no affection for Patrick, his attorney. Accompanied by his muscle, Freddy has a job for Leo that involves one of the patents on Leo's ward. No explanations, just demands. And threats, very painful threats. Hoping to escape in a comfortable marijuana haze with the least resistance, Leo balks, unwilling to be a pawn to the past, his brother's ambitions or Freddy's boss's demands. Leo is the perfect protagonist in an escalating tale of violence, an easy going soul forced to reassess the direction of his life and his commitment to the future. Vasquez takes charge from the first page in a compelling thriller that is part noir and part gutsy writing, Leo tapping into an inner strength that has thus far eluded him. It's all there in the dialog, Freddy's not-so-subtle maneuvers, Leo's frustrating exchanges with Patrick, and the irrevocable actions of one dark night at Lonesome Point in Belize. Surrounded by shuffling patients on the night ward and coworkers as unhinged as their charges, Leo has few options, but refuses to submit to his fate in a mad rush to evade Freddy that ends in a shocking, satisfying denouement. Fresh and deliberate, Vasquez is a writer to watch. Luan Gaines/2009.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.