3sg jef fery

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

miercuri, 29 decembrie 2010

Book Talk: *Beautiful Maria of My Soul*, by Oscar Hijuelos

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Beautiful Maria of My Soul by Oscar HijuelosBeautiful Maria of My Soul
Oscar Hijuelos
Hyperion (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 1401323340 / 9781401323349)
Fiction, 352 pages
Source: ARC provided by the publisher via LibraryThing Early Reviewers
Reason for reading: Review, sequel to earlier novel

Opening Lines: “Over forty years before, when Nestor Castillo’s future love, one Maria Garcia y Cifuentes, left her beloved valle in the far west of Cuba, she could have gone to the provincial capital of Pinar del Rio, where her prospects for finding work might be as good - or bad - as any other place; but because the truck driver who’d picked her up one late morning, his gargoyle’s face hidden under the lowered brim of a lacquered cane hat, wasn’t going that way, and because she’d heard so many things - both wonderful and sad - about Havana, Maria decided to accompany him, that cab stinking like kingdom come from the animals in the back and from the thousands of hours he must have driven that truck with its loud diesel engine and its manure-stained floor without a proper cleaning.”

Book Description, via the publisher’s website:  The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love is a contemporary American classic, a novel that still captures the imagination 20 years after its first publication. And now, in Beautiful Maria of My Soul, Oscar Hijuelos returns to the story, but tells it from the point of view of its heroine and inspiration, Maria.
She’s the great Cuban beauty, the woman who stole musician Nestor Castillo’s heart and broke it, inspiring him to write The Mambo Kings’ biggest hit, “Beautiful Maria of My Soul.” And here, she finally takes the spotlight.
Now in her 60s and living in Miami with her pediatrician daughter, Teresa, Maria is still a beauty, still capable of turning heads. But she has never forgotten Nestor, and as she thinks back to her days—and nights—in Havana, an entirely new perspective on The Mambo Kings story unfolds.

Comments: I read Oscar Hijuelos’ award-winning novel The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love nearly 20 years ago, when it was first published, and never gave much thought to its having a sequel. But when I learned that it had one - told from the perspective of the woman who inspired the fictional Castillo brothers’ best-known song, “Beautiful Maria of My Soul” - I remembered enough about the original novel to be interested. 

However, it seems that I’d forgotten quite a bit as well, particularly that the novel had a lot of sex in it - and that I’d found some of those scenes rather uncomfortable to read. That continues in Beautiful Maria..., but it bothered me differently this time. This review on  Powells.com, originally from The Oregonian, expresses my reaction pretty well:
“There are facets to Maria's life that, if developed, might have made her a truly memorable heroine: her guilt over her sister's death, her affection for the old man who teaches her to read, her ambiguous feelings for the abusive Ignacio, her longing to have a child -- and her ensuing disappointment at her daughter's plainness. Unfortunately, too often Hijuelos depicts Maria merely as an object of physical desire. Her relationships are explored mainly through numerous repetitive scenes of copulation. When men remember Maria, they can only recall moments of sex. More disappointingly, when Maria herself thinks about the men in her life -- even Nestor -- she values them only by how good they were in bed.”
Maria is a woman who seems to exist primarily under the male gaze; her most remarkable quality - not just to those male gazers, but to herself - is her physical beauty. Descriptions of her face, hair, and “traffic-stopping” body abound in the novel - and I’m not sure a woman would have written her that way. As the review quote mentions, there is more to her, though;  the sections of the novel that focus on other aspects of the character - her illiterate country upbringing, her drive to educate herself, her motherhood - were some of the parts I liked most, and I don’t think there were enough of them. There was more than enough about her looks, her desirability, and the sexual aspects of her relationships, though, including the skill and physical attributes of her lovers - and that all came across to me in a male voice, despite the fact that the protagonist is female.

As for the song-inspiring love between Maria and Nestor Castillo - my take on that is that theirs was a hormone-driven connection that they believed must therefore be a romantic one. Even in the midst of it, Maria realized they didn’t have a lot to talk about. Had they stayed together - that is, had she not refused him because she felt his ambitions were too narrow - biology dictates that the fires would have subsided eventually, and I’m not sure they’d have had much beyond that. 

Hijuelos’ writing is vivid and descriptive throughout, bringing mid-century, pre-Castro Cuba to life, and generously sprinkled with Spanish words and phrases; I just would have preferred less description of some aspects. My favorite part of the book was its final section, an amusingly meta twist in which the author becomes a character in his own novel when he writes the novel that first told Maria and Nestor’s story, The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love. Up until then, I’d have called Beautiful Maria of My Soul my most disappointing read of the year; while it kept my attention, I didn’t always want it to. I think it would be of interest primarily to readers who recall the earlier novel, and would also appeal to fans of Latino-American literature for its depictions of pre-revolutionary Cuba and the Cuban-American exile community in Miami. I’m not sorry I read it, but I’m sorry I didn’t like it better.

Rating: 3/5

Other reviews, via the Book Blogs Search Engine
The Boston Bibliophile
Seriously Reading
Killin’ Time Reading

I am an IndieBound Affiliate.  Purchasing this or any other book via this link will generate a small commission for me.Shop Indie Bookstores
Trimiteți prin e-mail Postați pe blog!Trimiteți pe XDistribuiți pe Facebook
Posted in fiction, one book at a time, reading, reviews | No comments
Postare mai nouă Postare mai veche Pagina de pornire

0 comentarii:

Trimiteți un comentariu

Abonați-vă la: Postare comentarii (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book Talk: *The Lonely Polygamist*, by Brady Udall
    The Lonely Polygamist: A Novel Brady Udall W. W. Norton & Company (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0393062627 / 9780393062625) Fiction, 608 pages...
  • Sunday Salon: The end (of the year) is coming!
    I finished and reviewed my 50th and 51st books of 2010 last week, although the reviews have yet to post here ( LibraryThing is all caught up...
  • BBAW 2010: Forgotten Treasures - Books Remembered and Recommended
      BBAW 2010:  A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs Thursday—Forgotten Treasure Sure we’ve all read about Freedom and Mock...
  • BlogHer'10: What's the "publishing ecosystem" evolving into?
    I'll warn you now - my BlogHer'10 experiences will, once again, be the subject of several posts. There are a couple of sessions I...
  • Book Talk: *Mockingjay*, by Suzanne Collins (w/a few spoilers)
      Mockingjay (The Final Book of The Hunger Games ) Suzanne Collins Scholastic Press (2010), Hardcover (0439023513 / 9780439023511) Fiction (...
  • Book Talk: *Red Hook Road*, by Ayelet Waldman
    Red Hook Road Ayelet Waldman Doubleday (2010), Hardcover (ISBN 0385517866 / 9780385517867) Fiction, 352 pages Source : ARC (Advance Reader...
  • Sunday Salon: Writers, readers, and NaNoWriMo
      For the second year in a row, I'm publicly saying NO to National Novel Writing Month ( NaNoWriMo ) . I love to read, and I love to wr...
  • BBAW: New Treasures - Book Blog Discoveries
    BBAW has an overall theme this year: "A Treasure Chest of Infinite Books and Infinite Blogs." Monday—First Treasure We invite you...
  • Sunday Salon: Season of the Lists
    Year-end is fast approaching, like it or not, and one sign of that is the arrival of the Lists. Because I’m once again nursing a disloca...
  • Sunday Salon: Thankful for blog-driven reading, and Indie Lit Awards!
      Karen ’s comment on my entry for last week’s Weekend Assignment made me stop and think for a minute: “It's interesting that your hab...

Categories

  • 'riting
  • #DailyBookPic
  • 24-Hour Readathon
  • a bunch of books
  • announcements
  • Armchair BEA
  • Audiobook Challenge
  • audiobooks
  • BBAW
  • BEA11
  • BEA12
  • blog tour
  • Blogging Authors Reading Challenge
  • BlogHer
  • BlogHer Book Club
  • blogs elsewhere
  • book bloggers
  • BookBloggerCon
  • CBSLA Best of LA
  • Comic Con 2011
  • ComicCon 2010
  • contests and giveaways
  • Ebook Reading Challenge
  • Faith 'n' Fiction 2011
  • family
  • Favorites List
  • fiction
  • FnFRT
  • food
  • fotos
  • Friday Foto
  • Friday/Monday Foto
  • guest post
  • holidays
  • Indie Lit Awards
  • LA Moms Blog
  • links
  • memes and blogger games
  • Memorable Memoirs Reading Challenge
  • metabloggery
  • MomsLA
  • Monday Moment
  • mostly true stories
  • NaBloPoMo
  • nerd factor
  • news traffic and weather
  • nonfiction
  • one book at a time
  • pop culture: movies
  • pop culture: music
  • pop culture: TV
  • randomness
  • reading
  • retrospective
  • reviews
  • roundup
  • RYOB Challenge
  • ShelfAwareness
  • SheWrites
  • site stuff
  • So Cal
  • Sunday Salon
  • THE HANDMAID'S TALE Read-Along
  • THE SPARROW Read-Along
  • TheSmartlyLA
  • thinking out loud
  • Thoughts From My Reading
  • travel
  • Tuesday Tangents
  • Vacation 2010
  • Weekend Assignment
  • Weekend Review
  • Weekly Geeks
  • work

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (18)
    • ►  ianuarie (18)
  • ►  2011 (239)
    • ►  decembrie (14)
    • ►  noiembrie (19)
    • ►  octombrie (12)
    • ►  septembrie (18)
    • ►  august (22)
    • ►  iulie (16)
    • ►  iunie (20)
    • ►  mai (21)
    • ►  aprilie (22)
    • ►  martie (24)
    • ►  februarie (26)
    • ►  ianuarie (25)
  • ▼  2010 (243)
    • ▼  decembrie (21)
      • Friday Fotos: Christmas Present, accessories edition
      • Character Studies, in brief
      • Book Talk: *Beautiful Maria of My Soul*, by Oscar ...
      • Tuesday Tangents: Christmas Present(s)
      • Friday Fotos: Christmas Past
      • Book Talk: *The Stupidest Angel*, by Christopher M...
      • Book Talk: *Stiltsville*, by Susanna Daniel
      • Tuesday Tangents: Early Christmas Gifts!
      • Party Time? (Weekend Assignment #349)
      • Sunday Salon: What I'm reading now, and what I'll ...
      • From the archives: Christmas Spectacle!
      • From the archives: The 12 days of Christmas...star...
      • The Book of Guilty Pleasures (Weekly Geeks 2010-40)
      • Thoughts from my Reading: Surfing the Third Wave
      • Book Talk: *Sisterhood, Interrupted*, by Deborah S...
      • Sunday Salon: Reading Notes and Bookkeeping
      • Week-End Review: Five (Links) for Friday, and intr...
      • Book Talk: *Girl Power: The Nineties Revolution in...
      • Imagine...it's been 30 years
      • (I Married a) Car Crazy (Guy): Weekend Assignment ...
      • Reading Plans for 2011 (Weekly Geeks/Sunday Salon ...
    • ►  noiembrie (33)
    • ►  octombrie (29)
    • ►  septembrie (25)
    • ►  august (24)
    • ►  iulie (23)
    • ►  iunie (26)
    • ►  mai (22)
    • ►  aprilie (28)
    • ►  martie (12)
Un produs Blogger.

Despre mine

Guy
Vizualizați profilul meu complet