A first-generation Cuban son comes of age in 40's NYC in the debut--and most autobiographical--novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.
A first-generation Cuban son comes of age in 40's NYC in the debut--and most autobiographical--novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.
A first-generation Cuban son comes of age in 1940s New York in the debut--and most autobiographical--novel by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love.
New York City, 1944. Hector Santinio is the younger son of Cuban immigrants Alejo and Mercedes. The fraught family of four shares their small, modest apartment with extended relatives in raucous Spanish Harlem. There are parties, dancing, and dreamy, homesick storytelling about their idyllic island. But life's realities are nevertheless harsh in the Santinio family's adoptive land.Mercedes decides to take Hector and his brother Horacio to visit relatives in Cuba to better know her culture. While there, the three-year-old Hector contracts a serious illness that leads to his terrifying year-long hospitalization and recovery back in the United States. Caught between his overly protective mother's fears for his health and his father's macho behavior and disappointments, the adolescent Hector struggles to understand his identity and place in the world.In the aftermath of his father's untimely passing, Hector staggers towards adulthood, haunted by notions of inadequacy and sadness and wrestles with the truth of his father as a deeply flawed but honorable man.This is a jewel-box of a tale whose treasure is the hope and yearning of immigrants in America.Includes a Reading Group Guide."Never loses the syntax of magic . . . a novel of great warmth and tenderness."--New York Times Book Review
"A story that stands up for the dignity of American immigrants."--Esmeralda Santiago, author of When I Was Puerto Rican
"Elegiac as well as bittersweet and celebratory."--Publishers Weekly
"Marked by eloquently trimmed prose, great assurance, and uncompromising darkness."--Kirkus
Oscar Hijuelos (1951-2013), a native New Yorker and the son of Cuban immigrants, was a Pulitzer Prize-winning author of nine novels and a memoir and a recipient of the Rome Prize awarded by The American Academy of Arts and Letters. He also received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. He became the first Latino winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1990 for his international bestseller The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love and his novels have been translated into more than 40 languages.
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