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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisite Reckonings
I first came across Ms. Braverman through a serendipitous reading of her Squandering the Blue. Palm Latitudes is an extraordinary work which traces the rooted infrastructure of three women's lives, each one a hybrid creation of the industrial village of Los Angeles, each one a cantadora of resonant flesh and spirit. To read Braverman's poetic masterpiece is to...
Published on May 8, 2000 by doctordiva

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Some lines are hysterical
If this author did not have an excellent reputation as a poet, it's hard to imagine this novel would ever have been published. There are so many exquisite lines that could have won the Bulwer Lytton contest for the worst first sentence of a novel that in their 'poesy' keep you laughing. My favorite is one which is about a person whose eyes were the blue color of the...
Published on July 12, 2008 by Eloise Hamann


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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisite Reckonings, May 8, 2000
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I first came across Ms. Braverman through a serendipitous reading of her Squandering the Blue. Palm Latitudes is an extraordinary work which traces the rooted infrastructure of three women's lives, each one a hybrid creation of the industrial village of Los Angeles, each one a cantadora of resonant flesh and spirit. To read Braverman's poetic masterpiece is to experience literary alchemy. I keep the novel at my bedside, as I have done for the past five years, and am repeatedly renewed by its presence. This is an masterful author to cherish; this is a work to sustain you through life's many quickenings and passages.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterpiece of Literature, January 17, 2006
I read Palm Latitudes while being snowed in during a freak blizzard, without power, heat or lights. I read most of the book out loud, the brillance of the language, the power of the word and a solitary candle kept me warm. It was as if I entered those Palm Latitudes during that snowstorm and those characters were with me.

Braverman, a Jewish woman, got a lot of flack for using three Latina voices for her characters. What her critics failed to recognized was she was creating a mythology, both feminine and tropical and it had nothing to do with the old white ways.

One of the characters in the novel comes to the realization, "We don't live in an age of anxiety. We live in an age of terror." I think this novel was ahead of it's time (written in the early 80's and not published until '89) with it's inclusion of AIDS, and the only redeemable males in the novel are homosexual, perhaps most people are not ready to enter these Latitudes. But if you deny yourself access, you'll be denying yourself the magic that the written page was meant to offer.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Powerful, insightful novel., August 2, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Palm Latitudes (Hardcover)
Kate Braverman is a writer who has been praised highly by important writers like John Rechy and Joan Didion. In this novel, Braverman continues to assert her unique view of modern life, especially in Los Angeles, which becomes a metaphor for greater latitudes. Her prose is rich and evocative, haunting at times. That this novel and others of her writings are out of print testifies to the indifference of publishers today to fulfilling their function to perpetuate fine writing.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Master Craftswoman, December 22, 1998
By A Customer
Braverman's writing is so beautiful, so packed with imagery, so multi-leveled that it almost overwhelms her story line. For those of us who love the language, her every sentence, every paragraph is like a trip to a fine dessert bar. This is a book in which to luxuriate.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Connections, September 26, 2000
Kate Braverman sees connections and shows them to us -- "She can outwait them. Any woman could. Women have waited millions of years, growing seperate as another species, with visions and priorities no man-words, no man-measurements can comprehend." -- like this one. A LUSH story.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Braverman Rocks Oceans in Palm Latitudes, June 16, 1997
By A Customer
It is indeed a shame that Kate Braverman's novels remain out of print. In Palm Latitudes, Braverman weaves a tale pregnant with imagery and humanity. It is the story of several women who are at similar precipices in their life; and in Braverman's world of Los Angeles, it is the women who are simultaneously enlightened by the textures of existence and caged by their men and their sex. A powerful novel with an equally engaging sense of feminism, Palm Latitudes examines men, women and culture with a startlingly microscopic and perceptive lens.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Some lines are hysterical, July 12, 2008
If this author did not have an excellent reputation as a poet, it's hard to imagine this novel would ever have been published. There are so many exquisite lines that could have won the Bulwer Lytton contest for the worst first sentence of a novel that in their 'poesy' keep you laughing. My favorite is one which is about a person whose eyes were the blue color of the pilot light of a stove of (and now I am making this up to match my recollection) owned by a man who..... add a full description of the rest of the house and how much he pays his gardener. Yes, if you are a fan of the music of words you will like this, but if you try to imagine a scene related to what the words describe you will find yourself in hysterics or scratching your head in a 'say what'. Either that or you will get seasick as you imagine the waving oleanders. It's been several years since I read this novel but chanced upon it on this website. Despite the excess, the story is a rose among the thorns of excessive writing that is worth reading.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars inspirational, January 31, 2003
By 
"iaruby" (Glendale, ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Palm Latitudes (Hardcover)
i am in an architecture program and i used this book to inspire a school project for housing. i was totally engrossed in the book.
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Palm Latitudes
Palm Latitudes by Kate Braverman (Hardcover - June 1988)
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