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Broken Paradise: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Cecilia Samartin Publisher: Washington Square Press Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $7.00 You Save: $7.00 (50%)
New (28) Used (12) from $6.86
Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 99510
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.3 x 1.2
ISBN: 1416550399 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781416550396 ASIN: 1416550399
Publication Date: February 19, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Cuba, 1956: Cousins Nora and Alicia are accustomed to living among Havana's privileged class -- but their lavish dinners, days at the beach, and extravagant dances come to an end after Castro's rise to power. Food becomes scarce, religion is forbidden, and disease runs rampant. Although Alicia stays behind while Nora emigrates to the United States, both of their identities are challenged as they try to adapt to the changes forced upon them. As the situation in Cuba deteriorates, Alicia is beset by bad fortune, while Nora -- whose heart is still in Cuba -- painfully assimilates into middle-class U.S. culture. Letters between the cousins track their lives until Alicia's situation becomes so difficult that Nora is forced to return and help. But what she finds in Cuba is like nothing she ever imagined.Told with wrenching insight into the tender balance between the hope and grief that shapes the immigrant heart, Broken Paradise is an extraordinarily powerful novel about passion, love, and the heart's yearning for home.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
Broken Paradise February 16, 2008 THE MAN IS STILL THERE! Not having a broad background of Cuban history, I found this book to be a great insight into the revolution and Castro's takeover and the true impact on its people and how they survive and our role as Americans. The author writes from a personal perspective, having been born in Cuba in the 60's. She develops interesting and memorable characters, with two cousins as the main focus. I did not want to put this book down. This makes a great bookclub read and I cannot wait to read her next book!
Great Read! February 12, 2008 I really enjoyed this novel. I really got involved with the characters. You laugh, you cry- nothing is missing. Delightful. It would make a great movie.
From paradise to hell to paradise to hell and back again October 30, 2007 A heartbreaking story of communist Cuba Beautifully written novel filled with metaphors. Nora, the narrator, forever reflects on her life in the medium of dreams. Alicia's life is always filled with metaphors, specifically in her letters to Nora. Follow the sad story of Alicia, who is left behind in Cuba. Marrying a handsome communist, birthing his handicapped baby, and then resorting to prostitution in hopes of escaping poverty. Alicia is afraid of losing her baby to the state. She is ever hopeful that her handsome husband will be released from prison. She befriends a guard with food, cigarettes, and sex just to preserve her husband. (Why is his release taking so long?) Alicia relies on the companionship of a prostitute friend. Meanwhile, cousin Nora is living a "normal" American life. Yes, Nora and sister, Marta, struggle to adjust, but they have an easy life, esp compared to Alicia's. Alicia conveys her pain in beautiful letters filled with emotions, metaphors, and hope. Perhaps the saddest loss is that of Alicia's precious beach, a beach where she communicated with GOD. What happens when Nora leaves behind her middle class life, husband included, to help Alicia? Will Nora adjust to the poverty in Havana? What exactly is wrong with Alicia and her child? And how will Nora reconcile her allegiance to native country and family with her "American marriage"? What type of love comes first? That to an Anglo spouse, or to an impoverished prostitute cousin? Samartin doesn't coat the finale in flan, you'll won't be able to stop reading once you read of Nora's adventures in the Atlantic Ocean. Only at the very end can we breathe a sigh of relief... for... Nora? Alicia? Alicia's child? Read and find out! (Warning- Description of a Santeria ritual, spirit communication, etc. DO NOT try any of this! It is EVIL. I'm disappointed that Samartin would have to include the ritual.)
As good as that other summer blockbuster... June 14, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I read this book immediately after finishing Hosseini's "A Thousand Splendid Suns" and can honestly say that I enjoyed it just as much. The tragedy that is Cuba is heartbreaking. I have a new understanding of the people who risk their lives and leave their beloved country to come to America. Samartin wrote a beautiful, lyrical, magical novel. Kudos to her!
An Impressive Literary Debut Devoted To The Cuban Revolution's Legacy March 19, 2007 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Cecilia Samartin's "Broken Paradise: A Novel" is one of the most impressive literary debuts in contemporary mainstream fiction that I've had the pleasure of reading. Its vivid, emotionally visceral tale of two cousins tragically separated during the 1959 Cuban Revolution's bloody, violent aftermath may be one of the most riveting explorations of humanity dealing with adversity since the original publication of Frank McCourt's best-selling memoir "Angela's Ashes". But I think most readers will identify more closely with Isabel Allende's splendid fiction, than Frank's superb literary memoir, and indeed, Cecilia Samartin is a fresh, newly minted Latin American writer worthy of comparison to Allende. Moreover, like Allende, Samartin has drawn extensively, from her own family history in telling such a beguiling, poignant tale. On a more personal note I am indebted to one of Samartin's editors, Amy Tannenbaum, for bringing her splendid literary debut to my attention.
Samartin offers a lyrical, quite descriptive, portrayal of middle class life in Havana, Cuba in the years prior to the 1959 Cuban Revolution. Her elegant prose and storytelling craft is at its best chronicling the extended family to which Nora Garcia and her cousin Alicia belong. She is almost as successful in describing Nora's sudden, unexpected departure to - and her new life in - the United States, as well as the unspeakable calamities which beset her relatives immediately after Fidel Castro's public declaration of his keen interest in and enthusiastic embrace of Communism. Regrettably Samartin's impressive literary talents are greatly diminished in the final chapters of her engrossing novel, offering a structurally weak set of circumstances which will reunite Nora with her cousin Alicia, clearly demonstrating that Alicia's life has been far from idyllic in the new "worker's paradise" that is Fidel Castro's Cuba. However, her rather conventional means of resolving loose plot ends ultimately doesn't dissuade me from regarding Samartin's novel as an impressive literary debut from an important new voice in Latin American literature. Surely Samartin's magnificient, elegant prose and fine storytelling is destined to win her a devout band of fans, who will be as eager to read her next novel as I most certainly am. I have no doubt that hers will be regarded as one of the most important literary debuts of this year.
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