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Find more info., search and price compare for I've Forgotten Your Name by Martha Riviera Binding: Paperback, 128 pages Publisher: White Pine Press Weight: 0.49 pound Dimension: H: 0.47 x L: 8.82 x W: 5.98 inches ISBN 10: 1893996735 ISBN 13: 9781893996731 Click here to search for this book and compare price at 40+ bookstores with AddALL.com! If you cannot find this book in our new and in print search, be sure to try our used and out of print search too! |
Book Description: When this novel was first published in Rivera's native Dominican Republic, readers were shocked. Expecting a light hearted romp through Caribbean sunlight and music, they were stunned by the multilayered com plexity and poetic power of the novel. A coming of age story of two young girls or is it is two sides of the same girl? caught between the onslaught of U.S. consumer culture and the evolving Marxist ideologies of the Cuban revolution, the story reflects the loss of any sense of identity as the girls move toward adulthood. While one voice recounts and reflects upon the story of her close relationship with a more adventurous friend in an effort to understand that friend, the other voice tells the story of how the experiences recounted by the first voice feel to her from inside. Despite their shared existence, the two have vastly different realities. 'All skin and bones at age 15 . . . Anorexia nervosa . . . but overall you look pretty happy,' states the first voice as she looks at old photographs. Despite their closeness, she is unable to see that the death of the other's father has left her unable to 'shake free of the icy current that had left death buried in my chest.' In their attempts to define who they are and how they will live their lives, they look for role models in writers and musicians, including Emily Dickinson, Lezama Lima, Alejandra Pizarnik, Carole King, Charlie Parker, Julio Cortazar and Rainier Maria Rilke, but as loss piles upon loss loss of cultural identity, loss of lovers, loss of dreams, loss of a child the women move ever closer to the realization that 'the worst solitude is the one that is shared.' Martha Rivera, born in 1960 in the Dominican Republic, has published three volumes of poetry in addition to this novel. |
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