Thanks to Euro Crime and The Game's Afoot, I am delighted to learn that Guillermo Orsi has won the 2010 Hammett prize for his novel Ciudad Santa (Holy City). Not yet published in English, but from the publisher's website (courtesy of the mad Google translate):
A collector of human heads meantime reveals two policemen locked in a duel that will have little to do with the law and even with their loyalties and deceptions.Buenos Aires, as a canoe full of fugitives from successive disasters, browsing aimlessly through a sea without beaches or horizons.This drift is the raw material with which Guillermo Orsi builds its Holy City, seductive, violent ...shocking.
With a cast of characters to remember,Holy City is the absorbing and breathtaking novels of a country that, when everything seems to have been said and even though it pretends obvious silence, speaking through their dead."
Sounds brilliant! (Read a more sanely put account of the book at Reuters website.) One assumes the translation into English, when it happens, will be a bit more subtle.
Although Ciudad Santa has not yet been translated, I recently read another book by this author, No-one Loves a Policeman, translated by Nick Caistor (more elegantly than the above, I have to say!), publisher Maclehose Press/Quercus. I very much liked this book, stating in my review:
If Ciudad Santa is as good as No-one Loves a Policeman, it will be very good indeed. I hope that those of us who have to rely on translations for non-English-language books won't have too long to wait.
Maxine - Thanks for this : ). I am very happy to hear this novel won, actually. I have to admit I'm also delighted because I don't have to wait for a translation. I normally do, and then one has to hope it's a good translation. But this time, I can actually read it .
Posted by: Margot Kinberg | 20 July 2010 at 22:04
That's great, Margot - I am so in awe of your multilingual talents!
Posted by: Maxine | 20 July 2010 at 22:08
The Hammett Prize is a new one on me--named, I assume, after DH?
In my work I find goodness fascinating; and now sure seems like a fitting time to revisit Hammett's vision of a person trying to be simply good in an insanely convoluted and shades-of-gray-and-black web.
Posted by: Shelley | 20 July 2010 at 23:24
It's a new prize on me too, Shelley, but I agree Hammett is a very worthy name for the award, I am a big fan of his books.
Posted by: Maxine | 21 July 2010 at 20:16