Maybe anything can happen on the Costa del Sol
For those who regularly sample the prose and stories of Frederick Forsyth, John Le Carré, Arturo Pérez Reverte or Lorenzo Silva, it is easy to find their mark on the novel with which Pedro Lasuén has decided to leap from reportage or journalistic chronicle to the upper echelon of literature. His novel "Tal vez" (Mascarón de Proa, Editorial Almuzara, 274 pages) is a more than promising debut in this range.
Pedro Lasuén (Madrid, 1974) knows the terrain he is treading well. He has known the Costa del Sol since his earliest childhood, before travelling the African continent and visiting some of its prisons, working in France as a journalist for Euronews for twenty years and working for the EFE agency in several African countries, before plunging into the world of judo, of which he is the head of media for the International Judo Federation. In the manner of the classic authors of the genre, he has sampled some of the good and much of the bad that the lows and highs of international politics, especially cross-border politics, have to offer.
He imbues his fast-paced tale with a humour halfway between British irony and Hispanic casticismo, a mixture that helps to shape the characters, any of whom end up becoming the reader's accomplice in some of their facets.