Synopsis
A Cuban literary critic, scriptwriter, and journalist,
Padura is known for his award-winning series of detective
novels, Las cuatro estaciones (The Four Seasons). In the
latest of his mystery novels he dwells on the famous Cuban
patriot and poet Jos Maria Heredia (1803-39) and on Fernando
Terry, a fictional Cuban professor exiled in Spain who
returns to Cuba prompted by the recent discovery of proof
that Heredia had produced an autobiographical novel. Padura
follows three plot lines: Heredia's short, convoluted
life, which forced him into unwanted exile in the United
States and Mexico; his son's efforts to hide the novel
and protect his father's reputation; and Terry's search
for political asylum.
Compared
with Heredia's, though, Terry's reasons for seeking political
asylum seem bland and devoid of historical analysis. Nevertheless,
Padura's original approach to the poet's biography and
his revisionist reading of the role slavery played during
Cuba's struggle for political freedom will appeal to Latin
Americanists. The novel also brings color to accounts
of Cuba's premier thinkers and political leaders, such
as Domingo del Monte and Jos Antonio Saco, who, like Terry,
found themselves involved in a convoluted political scene.
Latino readers will also find Padura's insightful analysis
of Heredia's tribulations in exile interesting. Recommended
for bookstores and libraries with a Cuban-American collection.
-Rafael Ocasio, Agnes Scott Coll., Decatur, GA - Source:
Publishers Weekly