Synopsis
The House on the Lagoon is the story of Quintin
Mendizabal and his wife, Isabel Monfort. Isabel, a fledgling
novelist, is writing a multigenerational novel about the
history of their families, of Spanish and Corsican origins,
and their arrival in Puerto Rico. Her ambition is great,
but her sense of history comically weak. When Quintin,
who happens to be a historian, finds her manuscript, he
begins to write alternate chapters expressing his own
point of view.
Isabel
colorfully weaves a tapestry of life among the ruling
classes of Puerto Rico, with their passionate debates
about independence, statehood, racism; their links to
Spain and Europe; and their ambivalence toward the United
States. But as she draws a self-portrait of her marriage
as well, it becomes clear that her relationship with her
husband is far from picture-perfect. Quintin becomes incensed
at Isabel's version of events, at her audacity in writing
a book, and an autobiographical one at that. And Isabel,
in her struggle to forge a new identity and free herself
from her coercive marriage and the constraints of the
culture, precipitates a conflagration that threatens to
consume the entire family.