Remaking A Lost Harmony: Stories from the Hispanic Caribbean
By (Author) Margarite Fernndez Olmos
Edited by Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert
White Pine Press
White Pine Press
8th July 2002
United States
General
Fiction
Short stories
813.01089729
Paperback
250
Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 20mm
382g
These diverse stories, all of which were written after the 1959 Cuban Revolution, reflect both the unique and colorful culture of the islands and the social changes that provided the impetus to search for the lost harmony of Caribbean and Latin American culture.
Wow! An important and timely collection of voices long known in the Caribbean...from this vital part of the hemisphere.Julia Alvarez
"The 25 stories in this collection - written since 1959 by Cuban, Dominican, and Puerto Rican writers - make accessible Caribbean literature long lost to most readers in this country because of differences in language, politics, and culture. Despite the variations in style, setting, and period to be expected in such an anthology, there are some common threads here, notably the evocation of Caribbean heat and light and the intertwining of the political with the personal. Police massacres rend the fabric of everyday life in Ana Lydia Vega's moving, multifaceted "Lillianne's Sunday" and disrupt a delicate voodoo ritual in Mayra Montero's "Corrine, Amiable Girl"; and the body of a notorious guerrilla leader is a family pawn in Pedro Peix's multi-voiced "Requiem for a Worthless Corpse." An impressive collection, which opens the door to a body of work "sandwiched between the North American and Latin American continents and literatures," in the words of author Julia Alvarez, and too long ignored." - Michele Leber, Booklist.
Margarite Fernandez Olmos and Lizabeth Paravisini-Gerbert, Editors