Carrasco 67′ A harrowing tale of an Imperialist Pig
Posted by Literary Titan

Carrasco ’67 is a historical suspense novel that drops the reader into Montevideo in 1967 and builds its story around political fear, family vulnerability, and a city that feels like it’s listening in. Author Elaine Broun frames the book as “a fictitious interpretation based on a true story,” and that matters, because the novel reads like a dramatized account of a real danger rather than a purely invented thriller. From the opening phone call, when Peter tells Paula, “The children, us, we are in danger,” the book announces exactly what kind of story it wants to be: urgent, personal, and rooted in the panic of trying to protect a family when the world around them has turned unstable.
What the novel does especially well is create a constant sense of exposure. Broun gives the political climate a lived-in texture through hotels, offices, chauffeurs, school runs, dinner events, bodyguards, and whispered logistics. The setting isn’t just backdrop. It’s the pressure system that shapes every choice. The affluent neighborhood of Carrasco, the business culture, and the presence of the Tupamaros all feed the book’s atmosphere, so the danger feels embedded in daily life rather than pasted on top of it.
The novel is also very character-driven, though in a direct, old-school way. Peter and Paula Gray are written less as complicated antiheroes and more as a family unit under siege, which gives the book a steady emotional center. Miguel de Luna, on the other hand, is drawn as a volatile, deeply self-involved threat, and Broun makes him effective by showing how fear becomes his method long before it becomes anyone else’s. When he says, “Frightened people are controllable, they become weak,” the line works because it doubles as both his worldview and the novel’s central argument about terror.
Broun’s prose leans into detail, sometimes almost scene by scene in the way it tracks movement, clothing, rooms, cars, and gestures. That can make the pacing feel deliberate, but it also suits the material. This is a book interested in procedure: surveillance, escape plans, daily routines, security checks, and all the tiny habits that suddenly matter when a family is being hunted. By the time the story reaches its late-stage operation to get the Grays out of the country, the accumulation of those details pays off because the rescue feels earned, organized, and tense rather than conveniently dramatic.
Carrasco ’67 is a family-in-peril historical thriller with a strong sense of place and a clear moral pulse. It’s most compelling when it stays close to the human cost of political violence and the quiet bravery of the people trying to keep one another alive. The book’s emotional engine isn’t spectacle. It’s the steady question of what ordinary life looks like once fear moves into the house and refuses to leave. That gives the novel its staying power, and it makes the story feel less like an action tale and more like a sustained account of endurance.
Pages: 234 | ASIN: B09BLBW45X
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on April 24, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Carrasco 67' A harrowing tale of an Imperialist Pig, ebook, Elaine Broun, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, psychological thriller, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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