
La Laguna, Tenerife. 250 years ago a serial killer terrorized the city. Today… he has returned.
La Laguna, Tenerife. While digging the foundations for a new building, a workman uncovers an underground crypt.
Piled inside are the strangely mutilated corpses of the townspeople who disappeared without a trace in the mid-18th century.
Detective Inspector Galán, fresh from a new case of murder committed only days before, finds the wounds on the mutilated corpses bear an uncanny resemblance to those of the homicide victim. Could it be a simple coincidence?
The charming, undiscovered city of La Laguna, with its fusion of Renaissance and Baroque styles, provides an intriguing backdrop for encounters between four oddly-matched individuals: a police inspector, an archaeologist, an erstwhile tax inspector and a cub journalist who become inextricably linked as they plunge ever deeper into the city’s murky past.

Mariano Gambín is an exciting new discovery with his first novel now available in English.
Ira Dei, the Wrath of God is a thriller of mystery and intrigue, now for sale on Amazon in English, with the rest of the trilogy in the pipeline.
This trilogy, set in the atmospheric UNESCO heritage city of La Laguna, Tenerife, was a great success with the public and critics in Spain, with Ira Dei, the Wrath of God, selling more than 50,000 copies.
His complex, nail-biting story lines are built on his background in the Canary Islands, where he is a prizewinning History Professor, practicing lawyer and active sportsman.
Gambín has written twelve crime fiction novels and several history books on the European colonisation of the Canary Islands, winning the Special Prize of the Cabildo de Gran Canaria (2005 and 2011) and the Rumeu de Armas Prize (2011) for his efforts, along with a Special Award for his outstanding doctoral thesis.
Gambín was born in Melilla, on the north African coast, in October 1963, as his father was the medical director of a hospital in Erfoud, on the edge of the Sahara, near the Algerian border, where civilisation ends and the desert begins. At the age of three, he and his family moved to Larache, near Tangiers, and then on to Santa Cruz, Tenerife, in 1970.
As a child, he was a very successful long-distance swimmer and he went on to become a Spanish Junior champion in the Modern Pentathlon, attending the Junior World Championships in 1988, before going on to study law at the University of La Laguna.
Some years later, he returned to his studies, History this time, graduating in 1998 before delving into an extensive period of historical research where he carved out a niche as a specialist in the 16th-century history of the Canary Islands, culminating in his prizewinning doctorate in 2011.
Gambín continues to indulge his love of sport alongside his successful career as a lawyer.
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El ritmo es trepidante y no decae en ningún momento. Los capítulos son cortos y acaban de tal manera que casi te obligan a comenzar el siguiente; el autor no te da respiro porque en cada capítulo uno de los personajes es el protagonista.
Anika entre libros
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- Reseña en la web Libros que voy leyendo
- Reseña en el blog Anika entre libros