#BookReview ‘The Hidden Assassins’ by @RobWilsonwriter #crime #Spain

The pace of The Hidden Assassins by Robert Wilson does not stop. The setting: Seville, Spain. The beginning: a mutilated corpse is found on a rubbish dump. The first turning point: an explosion at a block of flats turns out to be a terrorism attack on the mosque in the basement. Or is it? Detective Javier Falcón is swept along by the media circus and political panic as fear of a widescale attack on Andalucía grips Spain. Robert WilsonThis is the third of Robert Wilson’s four-book series about Falcón and the story twists and turns relentlessly. The plotting is excellent, I challenge you to work out the answers. As Javier unravels the knots you don’t know what to believe and neither does he.
I am fascinated by the insight into Falcón’s life provided by glimpses of his cooking. His housekeeper leaves his food in the fridge for him to prepare in the evening. He is something of a cook. “Encarnación had left him some fresh pork fillet. He made a salad and sliced up some potatoes and the meat. He smashed up some cloves of garlic, threw them into the frying pan with the pork fillet and chips. He dashed some cheap whisky on top and let it catch fire from the gas flame. He ate without thinking about the food and drank a glass of red rioja to loosen up his mind.” And then he goes out to work again. It is 10pm.
I will not give away the plot details, but there are sub-plots too involving characters who featured in books one and two: Javier’s ex-wife Inés and her husband the judge Esteban Calderón, his ex-girlfriend Consuelo, his sister Manuela.
As always, Seville is an additional character. Its streets, the heat, the lifestyle. It makes me want to go there now.

Here are my reviews of the other books in the Javier Falcón series:-
THE BLIND MAN OF SEVILLE #1FALCÓN
THE SILENT AND THE DAMNED #2FALCÓN
THE IGNORANCE OF BLOOD #4FALCÓN

If you like this, try:-
‘Liar Liar’ by MJ Arlidge #4HelenGrace
Lord John and the Private Matter’ by Diana Gabaldon
The Various Haunts of Men’ by Susan Hill #1Simon Serrailler

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE HIDDEN ASSASSINS by @RobWilsonwriter via @SandraDanby http://wp.me/p5gEM4-Zq

6 thoughts on “#BookReview ‘The Hidden Assassins’ by @RobWilsonwriter #crime #Spain

  1. Charlie Hebdo's avatarCharlie Hebdo

    I started the book. It’s supposed to be some thriller or crime thing of sort…

    I have reached page 74 – chapter 6 and so far there has been only 2-3 pages about the discovery of a cadaver without hands and face burned with acid.

    The rest has been the love problems of the cop; the juge; the girl the cops likes…. It’s absolutely bringing nothing to the story; just makes a book thick with pages full of the nothings of everydays’ life.

    Not really what I want or expect from that kind of literature.

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  2. Pingback: #BookReview ‘The Ignorance of Blood’ by @RobWilsonwriter #crime #Spain | SANDRA DANBY'S BOOK REVIEWS

  3. Pingback: #BookReview ‘The Silent and the Damned’ by @RobWilsonwriter #crime #Spain | SANDRA DANBY'S BOOK REVIEWS

  4. Pingback: #BookReview ‘The Blind Man of Seville’ by @RobWilsonwriter #crime #Spain | SANDRA DANBY'S BOOK REVIEWS

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