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Pepe Carvalho

Created by Manuel Vázquez Montalbán
(1939 – 2003)

“Do you realise that we private eyes are the barometers of established morality? I tell you society is rotten. It doesn’t believe in anything,” declares Spanish private eye PEPE CARVALHO to his friend, Biscuter, in Southern Seas (1979). Pepe is a fat and cynical eye, who may travel the world but makes his home in Barcelona, and possesses some at-times dubious politics, an agile mind, a silver tongue, and a taste for fine food and drink.

However, three months without a job and a lot to drink has him contemplating the sad fact that no one cares anymore about missing wives, adulterous husbands or runaway daughters. The problem these days isn’t that nobody cares. It’s that nobody gives a shit any more.

Pepe’s own past is one of moral ambiguity, including a stint in the CIA, and some strong links to the Spanish Communist Party. So he’s just the guy to investigate the uncertainties of a corrupt and changing society who’s emergence as a capitalist democracy is forcing change on the world he knew and understood.

In Off Side (1988), for example, he muses that he is “no longer the measure of his external world, or even of his internal world, but just a precarious survivor.” Somehow the run up to the Olympics has exposed something rotten “..the new city would no longer feel like the city he knew.”

As he puts it, “Rich people with a guilty conscience seemed to be a thing of the past.”

These books succeed on many levels and each is a delicious mix of classic private eye, social commentary, humour and gastronomic delight (Pepe may be the only hard-boiled detective to have a personal cook). The Angst-Ridden Executive (1977) stands as one of the great books in the genre with its stunning and downbeat ending. Southern Seas is similarly pleasing as Pepe investigates the disappearance of a rich businessman. Murder in the Central Committee (1981) has Pepe leaving his beloved Barcelona to investigate the murder of the General Secretary of the PCP and is a profound — and often hilarious — commentary on the changing face of post Cold War Europe.

In Off Side, Pepe is asked to investigate threats made against Barcelona FC’s new striker. His search takes him nowhere fast until he stumbles onto a corrupt pre-Olympic land deal involving an old Barrio Chino football club. The tone of the book is increasingly one of despair and loss. This theme continues in An Olympic Death (1993) as Pepe watches his beloved Barcelona change for the worse as he tries to come to terms with middle age.

For Pepe, Barcelona is the centre of the world. All things civilised, cultured and worth eating and drinking belong here. Throughout the books Barcelona is lovingly realised and, portrayed as a great noir city, it is a ‘character’ in its own right. Along its mean streets and barrios walks Pepe Carvhalo — astute, human, irreverent, a political realist who understands the need for pragmatism who misses the certainties of the past. A loner who will get the job done, so long as he can stop of on the way to indulge his real passions for food, drink and women, Pepe is one of the genre’s truly great creations.

He’s even been brought to both film and television. He first film appearance was in Tatuaje (19760, followed by Asesinato en el comité central (1982) and Los mares del sur (1990), with different actors playing Pepe every time. And in most cases, the producers opted for slimmer and more handsome actors to play Pepe.

The small screen seemed more suited to establishing Pepe as a series character. He made his debut in a Spanish production, starring Eusebio Poncela, that ran in the mid-eighties, and more recently, in a series of several made-for-TV films. Each 90-minute film was based on a novel or story from the Carvalho series, by a team of scriptwriters under the direct supervision of Manuel Vázquez Montalban himself. The series, starring Juanjo Puigcorbé as Pepe (pictured–apparently Pepe’s lost some weight), proved popular enough to even spawn a soundtrack LP.

Imagine Nero Wolfe leaving his apartment and going down the mean streets of Barcelona, and you’re halfway there. Toss in a whole lot more cynicism and you’re home.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Born in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, on July 27, 1939, Manuel Vázquez Montalban was one of Spain’s most popular and respected authors. He was also a well-respected columnist for the Madrid daily El Pais, as well as a poet, playwright, essayist, and humourist, writing about everything from food to sociology and politics. A fierce Catalan patriot, he was also a constant thorn in the side of the Franco regime ((he served 18 months in prison at one point, avoiding a much longer sentence due to his popularity. His Pepe Carvalho series has been translated into several different languages (including English), and has won international acclaim, his work translated into over 20 languages, and won the Planeta Prize (the Spanish version of the Booker Prize) in 1979 and the Grand Prix of Detective Fiction in France in 1981. He also wrote a standalone novel, The The Greek Labyrinth (1993), featuring private eye Juan Bardon.

Montalban passed away in the Bangkok airpost in 2003, but apparently you can’t keep a good Pepe down. More than 13 years after the demise of his creator, it was announced that Spain’s most famous fictional detective would rise again, in a new novel by Catalan author and poet Carlos Zanón, whose work has been compared to Montalban’s. The book was set to appear in 2019.

UNDER OATH

  

NOVELS

FILMS

  

TELEVISION

COOKING WITH PEPE

As mentioned before, Pepe enjoys a good meal and also likes cooking. Here are two of his favorites:

FROM THE PEANUT GALLERY

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

THE DICK OF THE DAY

Respectfully submitted by Peter Walker, with additional information by Kevin Burton Smith. And special thanks to Carlos Diaz Maroto and Wolfgang Mizelli for the leads, and Rudolf for his sharp eye.  Caricature by Miguel Ferreres.

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