The Watcher in the Pine

by Rebecca Pawel

Carlos Tejada (3)

On This Page

Description

Spain, 1940. Potes, a remote northern mountain village, is Carlos Tejada's first independent Guardia Civil command. He soon discovers that this "promotion" is a mixed blessing. The villagers are unwelcoming. He and his pregnant wife, Elena, have no place to live but the jail, and his own men seem strangely hostile. Is it just their suspicion of his wife's Republican sympathies? Or is there more going on in the beautiful but bleak area, recently devastated by the civil war? Tejada discovers show more that there may, indeed, be a new outbreak of that war with Potes as its epicenter. And he must find a way to reconcile his love for his wife with his duty. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

7 reviews
As a Spaniard living in far away Alaska I took "The Watcher in the Pine" with a little bit of incredulity. I couldn't picture somebody from a different culture being able to portrait accurately the day to day life of a small town in the Picos de Europa. Moreover the time period is one of political unrest and strong division in the country.
Also, I lived for a number of years in Oviedo, the capital of one of the provinces divided by the Picos de Europa. So it was a pleasant surprise when I started to recognize pretty accurate portraits of local types. The bar tender, the priest, the guardias themselves, have an air of authenticity. Not only that, he landscape is true to the area. It was with a certain familiarity that I read the show more encounter of Tejada with the priest, who's fishing on the river. The time of day, the scenery, even the repetitive casting while talking, were something I have experienced myself, and that I only got exposed to once I started living in that area.
From the point of view of the story, the unraveling of the plot seems flawless and not over predictable, which is a problem that I find in many whodonnits.
If you like the stile of Donna Leon or Andrea Camilleri, you'll probably find "The Watcher in the Pine" interesting at the very least.
show less
Lt. Carlos Tejada of Franco's Guardia Civil and his bride, Elena Fernandez, from a completely different background, travel to the mountain village of Potes as the war in Europe heats up and Loyalist guerrillas are still fighting in the mountains. Although Carlos' and Elena's politics are different, they share a basic integrity that allows them to be together. This episode in their story was more interesting for the characters than for the plot, but still very much worth reading.
Unexpectedly delightful! I now wish I'd started at the beginning of the series, but sometimes when I do that I wish I'd just tried a book from somewhere in the middle. Can't win really.

I had to look up the background to this book, set in the aftermath of the Spanish civil war, as I was entirely hazy on the whole concept. I was surprised to find the main character, Tejada, on Franco's side (sort of). But it becomes clearer as the book goes on that there is more to it than that. I'm guessing that the relationship with his wife Elena, which adds a lot to the political balance of the story, was built up in the previous books. This would have been a poorer book without Elena.
Deftly intertwines the personal relationship between Guardia Civil Tejada and his Socialist-sympathizing wife, and the historical aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, with a mystery plot. The mystery actually remains in the background for much of the story, to be brought back into the relationship drama in the last few chapters. I wouldn't mind reading more.
A city-dwelling, communist sympathizer marries fascist Civil Guard officer at end of the Spanish Civil War (before WW2) and has a hard time finding happiness until she has a baby and gets kidnapped. A perfect anti-fem book with spunky gal getting spelunked.

Found as a last minute airplane read. Tries to detail some north Spain history (gets one star for trying, another because I am a nice guy).
In this novel Elena and Carlos are married, she is expecting and they move to a small town in Spain where Carlos is in charge of the Guardia force.
They are treated sullenly by the townspeople and there are still some resistance fighters in the hills who shoot at the Guardia, usually to scare them. Elena manages to find some friends but has some awful moments when she is kidnapped

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

5+ Works 689 Members

Some Editions

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Watcher in the Pine
Original title
The Watcher in the Pine
Original publication date
2005-02-01
People/Characters
Carlos Tejada
Important places
Potes, Cantabria, Spain
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3616 .A957 .W38Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
131
Popularity
248,622
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.63)
Languages
Dutch, English, Turkish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
3