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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Potentially good for those who understand the history,
This review is from: En el nombre de Salome (Spanish Edition) (Paperback)
I struggled to finish this book simply because of the way the story of the two protagonists was written. Salome (the mother) and Camila (the daughter) never met each other because Salome died when Camila was very young.Salome was a famous poet in the Dominican Republic and lived during a difficult historical period in her country. On the other hand we see the life of Camila, a retired schoolteacher who is about to leave the US to live in Cuba and play a role in the Cuban Revolution. Salome is by far the more interesting character and her poetry was pivotal in the Dominican revolutionary period. Out from her writings the reader learns more about the DR during the 16th century. Camila seems more disoriented, unsure of herself and did not live the life that she wanted to and being more active in the Cuban political sphere did not change her life at all. The book is interesting from the point of view that it relates the story of two people's life, mother and daughter in two distinct time frames but it would have been more interesting if I had known more about Dominican political history because the book is heavily oriented around their history. I think this one of those books that will either captivate you or not interest you at all but I say it the reader's choice if you are curious and if you like Julia Alvarez as a writer.
3.0 out of 5 stars
This is a novel for all of us who have loved a mother, a daughter and a country, all of which were lost forever.,
By
This review is from: En el nombre de Salome (Spanish Edition) (Paperback)
En el Nombre de Salomé by Julia Álvarez - Vintage Spanish
This is the story of Camila Henríquez Urena, a professor that is retiring from teaching at Vassar University, as she is packing her belongings. She is moving from her apartment in Poughkeepsie, NY, to join the Cuban Revolution headed by Fidel Castro. Camila is Salomé Urena's daughter--the famous Dominican poet from the end of the 19th century, who inspired revolution with her passionate verses, married a President of the Republic, and fought to educate the women of her beloved Island. Camila's call to the Revolution is part of her inheritance; just like she has suffered the pain of being in exile. She only owns two chests filled with papers and personal effects to try to remember the mother she never knew. Salome is by far the more interesting character and her poetry was pivotal in the Dominican revolutionary period. Out from her writings the reader learns more about the DR during the 19th century. Camila seems more disoriented, unsure of herself and did not live the life that she wanted to and being more active in the Cuban political sphere did not change her life at all. This is a novel for all of us who have loved a mother, a daughter and a country, all of which were lost forever.
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