BREAKING NEWS: “SWEET MARY” HITS BOOKSTORES TODAY, TUESDAY JULY 14TH. IN MIAMI STOP BY BOOKS AND BOOKS, 264 ARAGON AVE BETWEEN 8 – 10 AND MEET LIZ BALMASEDA.
BUT FIRST A WORD FROM AP . . .
BOTTOM LINE: “Still, it’s a fun summer read. And it’s not often readers get to cheer a stylish Cuban-American soccer mom turned gun-toting detective.”
Reporter’s fiction debut from headlines

By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ, AP Hispanic Affairs Writer – Mon Jul 13, 3:47 pm ET
“Sweet Mary” (Atria Books Hardcover, 242 pages, $24.99), by Liz Balmaseda: Real estate agent and single mom Mary Guevara is preparing for work when U.S. marshals suddenly show up at her door.
The next thing the heroine of “Sweet Mary” knows, she’s in handcuffs. The marshals have a warrant for her arrest on cocaine related charges. Never mind the name of the woman in the warrant doesn’t match Mary’s, nor does the suspect’s birthday or even her photo. None of that matters as Mary is led away, leaving her young son screaming.
Pulitzer-prize winning columnist Liz Balmaseda serves up only a brief introduction before she knocks readers in the gut with her fast-paced fictional debut, which is based on a true 2003 story.
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Posted on Sun, Jul. 12, 2009
Review | ‘Sweet Mary’: Two Marys and a bad DEA arrest in Miami
BY ELLEN KANNER
Sweet Mary. Liz Balmaseda. Atria. 256 pages. $24.95.
Former Miami Herald reporter and two-time Pulitzer winner Liz Balmaseda goes from star journalist to debut novelist with her sleek ripped-from-the-headlines Sweet Mary. The story she chooses as inspiration isn’t related to her 1993 award-winning reportage on Miami’s Haitian and Cuban refugees or the Elian Gonzalez saga, for which she earned a shared Pulitzer in 2001. Sweet Mary is inspired by a story Herald columnist Joan Fleischman covered in 2003, about a Kendall woman wrongly mistaken for a cocaine queen with a similar name.
Now with The Palm Beach Post, Balmaseda takes the bare bones of the mistaken-identity case and with confident, easy strokes, shows how quickly the life we each work to build can be ”smashed on the floor.” But her heroine is not going to take that lying down. Dulce Maria (Sweet Mary) Guevara is 33, divorced, a devoted mom to 8-year-old Max and a Miami Realtor to be reckoned with.
”In just about every real estate deal there comes that critical moment when you’ve got to do the dance,” Maria says. ”It’s that do-or-die moment when the client is holding all the
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