Nobody cries for me anymore, by Sergio Ramirez

Nobody cries for me anymore
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When crime novels plunge directly into the quagmire of power and its unfortunately frequent corruption, the resulting stories are shocking in their hurtful reflection with reality, a stinking reality clothed in makeshift moral appearances.

The cases that are usually presented to the private investigator Dolores Morales move along the paths of infidelities and other particular matters of little importance. When the case of the disappearance of a young heiress, the investigator assumes that this is his moment to tackle other orders of greater substance, prestige and money.

However, the search for the daughter of his millionaire client discovers for Dolores an underworld installed in high places, a kind of tacit agreements between good (represented by institutions and politicians) and evil (which may well be companies or mafias) . Under the guise of a country championed by revolution and socialism for the people, such as Nicaragua, there may be sordid interests that wave the flag for their own benefit or that seek, under the protection of the new Sandinismo, a space for the most shady businesses. Any resemblance to reality is mere coincidence, but you know that fiction not infrequently surpasses reality.

Breaching according to tacit agreements, those signed between the apparent order and the prevailing evil, can have dire consequences for either party. Inspector Dolores Morales, once he has seen this underlying reality, can also be affected. But Morales is not a nobody who can be easily intimidated. Once he has approached the sewers of power, Morales will want to go to the last extreme, to try to present the real state of things to the world. In the end, the case of the disappeared girl, handed over to a half-baked investigator, can lead to a political disclosure that calls into question the established order.

You can now buy the novel Nobody cries for me anymore, the new novel by Sergio Ramirez, here:

Nobody cries for me anymore
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