Celebrate Cinco de Mayo! Read a mystery!
The holiday of Cinco De Mayo, the 5th Of May, commemorates the victory of the Mexican militia over the French army at The Battle Of Puebla
 in 1862. It's primarily a regional holiday celebrated in the Mexican 
state capital city of Puebla and throughout the state of Puebla, with 
some recognition in other parts of the Mexico, and also in U.S. 
cities with a significant Mexican population. It's not, as many people believe, Mexico's Independence Day, which is actually September 16.
I've blogged about Cinco de Mayo Mysteries before, but I think it's always good to run this post again-- with a few additions for  those who missed 
it or won't take the extra step to click. :-) 
This list is supplemented with Mexican mystery  writers and books set  in Mexico. Let me know any titles or authors you think should be included.
Add to your Cinco de Mayo reading pleasure with  a Mexican Chocolate  Celebration. Check out my other Blog, Dying  for Chocolate, for recipes and suggestions of great Chocolate for  Cinco de Mayo. Entrees, drinks and desserts and more desserts.  I've also posted several recipes for different versions of Mole Poblano and Mexican Chocolate Truffles (including Tequila Truffles).
Cinco de Mayo Mysteries:
The Cinco de Mayo Murder by Lee  Harris
A Corpse for Cuamantla by Harol Marshall
Cinco de Mayo by Michael Martineck (science fiction/but cross-over)  
The Bane of Cinco de Mayo  by Nathan S. Mitchell
The Cinco de  Mayo Reckoning by Terry Money
And a few Mexican crime writers who set their mysteries in  Mexico but not Cinco de Mayo. They have not all been translated into English.
Mexican Crime  Writers:
Paco Ignacio  Taibo II  The Uncomfortable Dead (and numerous other novels) 
Eduardo Monteverde
Juan Hernandez Luna
Martin Solares
Elmer Mendoza 
Rolo Diez
Juan Hernandez Luna
Hardboiled fiction on the Mexican-American  frontier: 
Gabriel Trujillo Munoz-known for his science fiction  and literary criticism, also writes detective fiction: Mesquite Road, Tijuana City Blues 
Carlos  Fuentes: Cabeza de la Hidra (The Hydra  Head)
Joaquin Guerrero-Casaola: The Law of the Garrotte
Rolando Hinojosa: Partners in Crime, Ask a Policeman
Want to find out more?
Read G.J. Demko's  Landscapes of Crime.
Read Lucha Corpi's: La  Bloga on Chicana Crime Fiction: Where to?
Read  an essay
  by Jennifer Insley "Border criminals, border crime:  hard-boiled  
fiction on the American Frontier in Confluencia: Revista  Hispanica de  
Cultura y Literatura
YA Literature? You Don't Have a Clue: Latino Mystery Stories for Teens, edited by Sarah Cortez (Arte Publico Press)
Interested in Crime for the Holidays? Check out Mystery Readers Journal, Volume 25:1.
And a fun fact: 
Five most popular Tequilas in the U.S.
1. Jose Cuervo
2. Patron
3. Sauza
4. Herradura
5. Cabo Wabo
And, here's one of my favorite roses: Cinco de Mayo! a repeat bloomer with a unique shape, color and perfume! 

 
2 comments:
Lucha Corpi has also written mysteries. The first being Eulogy for a Brown Angel. Was on a panel with her a few years back. An absolutely delightful woman and I enjoyed her first mystery.
I love Lucha, too... I was on a panel with her a few years ago, as well.
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