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Hardcover The Summer Snow Book

ISBN: 1569474087

ISBN13: 9781569474082

The Summer Snow

(Book #4 in the Tejada Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

In the city of Granada, Spain, fear of the Red Menace is still strong. One rich, arrogant, elderly lady summons the police to her home almost once a week: she is sure Communists are plotting against... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An excellent book of a mystery and relationships

Lieutenant Carlos Tejada comes to Granada with his wife and son after his wealthy grand aunt has died. She had been a querulous old lady always seeing conspiracies but Carlos finds she had been murdered. While trying to find his aunt's killer, his wife, Elena, must deal with her in-laws disapproval of her while trying to keep their young son amused. I so enjoy this series as much for the relationship of Tajada and his wife as for the mystery itself. It is not a perfect marriage. They were raised differently, and have very different political views which cause friction. In other words, it's realistic. It's interesting seeing Tajada in an environment where he is not in command of the men, but of the investigation, and where has to interrogate family members, including his father. This is a very good, character-driven story still with a very good mystery. I highly recommend this series.

Evocative and enjoyable

I'm a big fan of Rebecca Pawel's Tejada series and found "The Summer Snow" an agreeable read, if somewhat less so than its predecessors. The murder mystery at the core of the book's plot was less interesting than the author's very evocative descriptions of the provincial city of Granada in the post Spanish Civil War period. The tensions within the Tejada family--father and son especially--are also convincingly laid out by the author. Good book for history buffs, particularly for those into Spain and Europe of the late 1940s.

The Petulant Prodigal Son Returns

The wife is still irritating although a little less of a nag than in "Watcher in the Pine". Carlos acts a bit like a petulant brat with his family and complains too much about familial obligations. He seems to find his family often a burden rather than something to which he should feel a duty towards. I have a sucspicion that Carlos is becoming a Centrist, not a liberal of course, but nonetheless a Centrist. In "Death of a Nationalist" he killed someone in cold blood. The now married, Carlos in fatherhood, wouldn't dream of it. Sad to say, but Rebecca Pawel seems to be giving in to some sort of PC urge and taming the Falangist from the first book. And the blurb on the cover should soon read "A Carlos Tejada Alonso y Leon & Wife Investigation". Just one more thing, the dust jacket on the hardcover has a blurred photo of Ms. Pawel. Coulnd't she give a better one??

An Outstanding Historical Novel & Riveting Mystery ! BRAVO Ms. Pawel!

"Summer Snow" is Rebecca Pawel's fourth novel featuring Carlos Tejada Alonso y Leon, and each book is more intriguing than the previous. Set in post Civil War Spain, the author accurately paints a grim portrait of a country settling into the "normality" of an uneasy peace. Atrocities have devastated both sides of the conflict. The populace's "us" versus "them" attitude will continue for many years, and even in 1945, battle scars are still fresh, as are memories of dead loved ones, festering political wounds and fears of the Red Menace. Many areas of Spain are in ruins, and food shortages leave much of the population hungry - some are literally starving Although descriptions of the humiliation, defeat and isolation of those who did not support Franco's cause is made palpable throughout Ms. Pawel's intelligent narrative, with "Summer Snow" she gives the reader an idea of how the other half - the winning Falangists - live and think. Fascinating material, made more so by the author's intelligent, knowledgeable writing and original plot. The Lieutenant, his wife, Elena, and their small son have been asked to visit Tejada's family in the beautiful southern city of Grenada, where they are wealthy landowners. Carlos' great aunt, Dona Rosalia Ordonez, died suddenly and Sr. Andres Tejada, our protagonist's father, believes she was murdered. The only copy of her will, in which she bequeaths considerable amounts of money and land holdings is missing. The eccentric old woman had always insisted that the Reds were out to murder her. She also feuded almost continuously with members of her immediate family and subsequently changed her will frequently to signify her anger and mood swings. Her final revision was made just a few days before her death. Carlos is asked by his father to come home from Potes, in the northern mountains where he is stationed to investigate. Since Guardia policy is for officers to serve in regions far from their family homes, "so they will not be subjected to local pressures," the Tejada family must take vacation time for Carlos to solve what does turn out to be a nasty murder case...with many interesting suspects, including his own father, and as many varied motives. To spice up the story, Carlos and Elena both have problems with "the family." The Tejada Alonso y L?on and Ordonez families are embarrassed by their youngest son's career choice - so plebeian - when he could have remained at home and led the life of a senorito...a spoiled, rich younger son. And then he married a Red! Needless to say, they are barely civil to Elena. Carlos Tejada is one of the most well developed characters that I have met in recent popular fiction, as is his wife. They are both extremely bright, well educated, decent people, and polar opposites politically. He is the second son of a wealthy landowner, a conservative, and a staunch Nationalist. He backed Franco from the beginning. Now, as a lieutenant in the Guardia Civil, his political views have been m

After a disappointing third book...

Rebecca Pawel seems to have regained her storytelling prowess. It's amazing that such a young writer can produce work with the amount of detail and character nuance that Pawel has done in her four books. Her third one was rather disappointing after two previous ones, but this book, her fourth, is extremely well written. If you are a new to Pawel's writing, I'd suggest beginning with her first book.
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