Death Comes in Through the Kitchen by Teresa Dovelpage (Soho Crime, 2018) is an intriguing culinary
mystery that is by no means cozy. At all. Set in Havana late in the Fidel
Castro regime the book begins when Matthew, a journalist from San Diego,
travels to Cuba to marry his online girlfriend Yarmila, whom he met through her
food blog that showcases classic Cuban cuisine. He is traveling with another
American who is meeting her much younger lover. Yarmi is not at the airport to
meet him, as they had arranged, so he makes his way to her apartment house,
only to find her body in the bathtub there.
The police are well aware that Yarmi
was killed before Matthew arrived in Havana but they confiscate his passport
anyway. He is limited as to what he can do in this highly regimented country
without a passport and after a few days he grows desperate enough to enlist the
help of a private detective to clear his name so he can return to the United
States. In the meantime he hears enough to notice gaps between the persona
Yarmi projected on her blog and the person her closest friends knew. While he
turns the discrepancies over in his mind, he sees something of Havana and the
deprivations its residents endure, as well as the small ways they circumvent
the severe limitations on their lives.
This book is as much a social and
political commentary on the time and setting as it is a mystery, perhaps more.
The impact of governmental oppression and economic hardships is clearly
delineated in a matter-of-fact way, which renders the effect more powerful.
Every two or three chapters is punctuated by one of Yarmi’s blog posts which
includes a classic Cuban recipe and the comments of her readers. The book
begins with Matt’s arrival in Cuba and ends with his departure, a clean way to
delineate the beginning and ending of his adventure here.
This is the second book I’ve read in as
many months in which the ease of getting people to accept a false online
persona is a major theme. Matt realizes just how gullible he has been by the
time the plot is resolved, and I expect readers will have every sympathy for
him.
Publishers Weekly starred review.
Hardcover: 368 pages
Publisher: Soho Crime; 1st Edition edition (March 20, 2018)
ISBN-10: 1616958847
ISBN-13: 978-1616958848
Aubrey Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal IT
projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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