Synopsis
Critics worldwide
have praised Reinaldo Arenas's writing. His extraordinary
memoir, Before Night Falls, was named one of the fourteen
"Best Books of 1993" by the editors of The New
York Times Book Review and has now been made into a major
motion picture.
The
Color of Summer, Arenas's finest comic achievement,
is also the fulfillment of his life's work, the Pentagonía,
a five-volume cycle of novels he began writing in his
early twenties. Although it is the penultimate installment
in his "secret history of Cuba," it was, in
fact, the last book Arenas wrote before his death in 1990.
A Rabelaisian tale of survival by wits and wit, The
Color of Summer is ultimately a powerful and passionate
story about the triumph of the human spirit over the forces
of political and sexual repression.