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A Cafecito Story: El Cuento Del Cafecito
 
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A Cafecito Story: El Cuento Del Cafecito [Paperback]

Julia Alvarez (Author), Bill Eichner (Author), Belkis Ramirez (Author), Daisy Cocco de Filippis (Translator)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2002
A Cafecito Story is a story of love, coffee, birds and hope. It is a beautifully written eco-fable by best-selling author Julia Alvarez. Based on her and her husband's experiences trying to reclaim a small coffee farm in her native Dominican Republic, A Cafecito Story shows how the return to the traditional methods of shade-grown coffee can rehabilitate and rejuvenate the landscape and human culture, while at the same time preserving vital winter habitat for threatened songbirds.
Not a political or environmental polemic, A Cafecito Story is instead a poetic, modern fable about human beings at their best. The challenge of producing coffee is a remarkable test of our ability to live more sustainably, caring for the land, growers, and consumers in an enlightened and just way. Written with Julia Alvarez's deft touch, this is a story that stimulates while it comforts, waking the mind and warming the soul like the first cup of morning coffee. Indeed, this story is best read with a strong cup of organic, shade-grown, fresh-brewed coffee.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A Better Cup of Coffee
By Karen Marzloff
From HippoPress Manchester

When Joe stops at the roadside barra outside his Dominican vacation resort, he finds the local coffee comes in a single, perfect denomination, "a dollhouse-sized cup filled with delicious, dark brew that leaves stains on the cup." He takes a sip and tastes a coffee that will change his life forever.
Joe is the main character in the adult fable/parable A Cafecito Story by award-winning Vermont novelist Julia Alvarez (How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents (1990), In the Time of Butterflies (1993), and In the Name of Salom© (2000)). Illustrated with wonderful, imaginative woodcuts by celebrated Dominican artist Belkis Ram­rez, the book comes in three parts: The "Cafecito Story" of the books title; an afterward by Bill Eichner, Alvarez's spouse and co-owner of their organic coffee farm; and a surprisingly rich and sensible resource section.
"The Cafectio Story" unfolds through the eyes of Joe, a Nebraska native with farming in his blood. Joel feels increasingly displaced from the natural world, so he takes a getaway vacation to the Dominican Republic.
What's so special about the cafecito he finds there? The beans were grown in the traditional way, on a shaded farm in the Dominican's mountainous interior. When Joe visits a coffee farm in the hills, the farmer Miguel tells him that the old ways are fast disappearing as farmers rent their plots to "La compa±ia" to grow coffee quickly in full son, for better short-term yields. The result is the destruction of a sustainable way of life through deforested mountains, depleted soils, and pesticides and chemical fertilizers that wash into the rivers. And for the coffee drinker half a world away, notes Miguel, "The sprayed coffee tastes just as good if you are tasting only with your mouth. But it fills you with the poison swimming around in that dark cup of disappointment."
I'm drinking a cup of certified organic coffee as I write this. How could I drink anything else? This book is meant to be more than light summer reading. It's meant to change your thinking, and it's likely that it will.
Eichner and Alvarez's real-life story picks up where the fable leaves off. Eichner writes in the afterward about Alta Gracia, their organic coffee farm established with them campesino neighbors in the Dominican Republic. Where the fiction is simple and prose sometimes choppy, the afterward is much more lyrical. It clearly conveys the rewards of helping to renew a landscape scorched by agribusiness, the joys of seeing the songbirds return and the literacy rate rise, and the fulfillment in transforming the dream of sustainability into a reality.
Like a young tree, the parable and the real-life story intertwine and take root in the reader. In part three, an extensive and imaginative list of resources will help coffee drinkers participate in fair trade, a set of marketplace practices that create a better future for half a million family coffee farmers around the world.
In an age when we often want to make a difference but are uncertain of where to begin, drinking a better cup of coffee doesn't seem like much to ask. After all, writers Eichner, "Anyone can begin by planting a tree, or a hundred trees…. The future does depend on each cup, on each small choice we make."
Eichner and Alvarez manage to tell a complex story with global consequences without being preachy of heavy-handed. They intend to inspire, and they do.

Language Notes

Text: English, Spanish (translation)
Original Language: English

Product Details

  • Paperback: 80 pages
  • Publisher: Chelsea Green; Bilingual edition (June 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1931498067
  • ISBN-13: 978-1931498067
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #199,563 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Julia Alvarez has bridged the Americas many times. Born in New York and raised in the Dominican Republic, she is a poet, fiction writer, and essayist, author of world-renowned books in each of the genres, including How the García Girls Lost their Accents, In the Time of the Butterflies, and Something to Declare. She lives on a farmstead outside Middlebury, Vermont, with her husband Bill Eichner. Visit Julia's Web site here to find out more about her writing.

Julia and Bill own an organic coffee farm called Alta Gracia in her native country of the Dominican Republic. Their specialty coffee is grown high in the mountains on what was once depleted pastureland. Not only do they grow coffee at Alta Gracia, but they also work to bring social, environmental, spiritual, and political change for the families who work on their farm. They use the traditional methods of shad-grown coffee farming in order to protect the environment, they pay their farmers a fair and living wage, and they have a school on their farm where children and adults learn to read and write. For more information about Alta Gracia, visit their website.

Belkis Ramírez, who created the woodcuts for A Cafecito Story, is one of the most celebrated artists in the Dominican Republic.

 

Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Buying a book is a political act - and so is buying food., November 18, 2001
By 
"hall1118" (Tucson, Arizona United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Cafecito Story (Hardcover)
This simple story of a man, a new life, and a family struggling to survive and to be literate was moving to me. The lovely illustrations are woodcuts by Belkis Ramirez, an artist from the Dominican Republic. Also, as a rabid coffee lover, it brought back memories of rich aromatic coffee in cafes in Guatemala and Mexico. I recommend this book for anyone who is trying to live her or his life deliberately, trying to help with sustainable agriculture, and trying to make a difference in small but vital ways to a more balanced global economy.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Praise for Alvarez, June 1, 2005
By 
This review is from: A Cafecito Story (Hardcover)
I picked this book up purley by chance. It was on a featured book table at my local library. I don't normaly real a lot of fiction but something made me check it out. I brought it home and started reading it the next morning while having my morning coffee. Theres something in the author's writing style that just makes you want to read more and more. I will most deffinently be purchasing this book and cherishing it forever. Thank you Julia Alvarez!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Cafecito Story, March 21, 2005
This review is from: A Cafecito Story: El Cuento Del Cafecito (Paperback)
A Cafecito Story is written by the well-known author, Julia Alvarez. It is a story about finding yourself and finding what will truly make you happy in life. The story is about a young man named Joe. Joe was born and raised in a small town in Nebraska. The town was a farming town so Joe grew up learning how to be a farmer. Joe's father was his most influential role model. Joe's father taught him the values of life. Joe wanted to be as loving and as good a farmer as his father was one day. As time goes by, the farm's business begins to fall. The farm must be put up for sale. Joe was sad when the farm was sold because it was the place he had grown up in. It was his home. When Joe becomes older he becomes a schoolteacher, meets and falls in love with a woman and gets married to this woman and also moves to Omaha. As time goes by, the marriage begins to fail. Feeling lost and confused, Joe plans a trip to the Dominica Republic at Christmas time. Joe just wanted to get away from his everyday life so that he could think about the way his life was going. After Joe had arrived in the Dominican Republic, one morning he was having a cup of coffee. A random woman told him that she could predict his future by looking at the stains in his coffee cup. The woman tells Joe that he will begin a new life in the mountains with the natives of the land. After hearing this, Joe decides to take a trip to the mountains. While in the mountains he stays with a family that reminds him of his own. This family owns a coffee farm. While staying with this family, Joe learns of the struggles that these people go through everyday of their lives. He soon learns that the family is going to have to sell their beloved coffee farm to a large industry that will make more coffee in less time and in turn make more money. The only way that the farm will be saved is if someone else buys the farm and helps run it. After learning of this option, Joe decides to buy the farm. He stays on the farm and grows coffee. Joe is proud of what he is doing with his life and for once in his life he feels happy. Joe knew that he was doing the right thing.
The book was a wonderful story of finding yourself. It is a short quick read but contained much meaning. Many people today go their whole lives and are never truly happy. Joe knew that he had to change his life. A lot can be learned from this book. It is a heart-warming story filled great lessons for all people. Joe followed his dreams and took a chance. All people need to take chances in life. Some chances pay off and some do not, but that is what life is, one big chance.
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