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The News from Paraguay: A Novel Hardcover – Deckle Edge, May 4, 2004
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“Brimming with rich descriptions of a beautiful country….The News From Paraguay evolves from a quirky, elegant tale of an unconventional love affair into a sweeping epic.” — Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Lily Tuck’s impressive novel offers a kaleidoscopic portrait of 19th century Paraguay, a largely untouched wilderness where European and American figures mix with the Spanish aristocracy of the capital and the indigenous peoples from the surrounding areas.
The year is l854. In Paris, Francisco Solano—the future dictator of Paraguay—begins his courtship of the young, beautiful Irish courtesan Ella Lynch with a poncho, a Paraguayan band, and a horse named Mathilde. Ella follows Franco to Asunción and reigns there as his mistress. Isolated and estranged in this new world, she embraces her lover's ill-fated imperial dream—one fueled by a heedless arrogance that will devastate all of Paraguay.
With the urgency of the narrative, rich and intimate detail, and a wealth of skillfully layered characters, The News from Paraguay recalls the epic novels of Gabriel García Márquez and Mario Vargas Llosa.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper
- Publication dateMay 4, 2004
- Dimensions5.62 x 0.93 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-100066209447
- ISBN-13978-0066209449
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Editorial Reviews
From The New Yorker
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“Tuck’s prose is elegant, the subject well researched.” — New York Times Book Review
“Compelling…the stuff that good fiction is made of: complex characters and an intricate narrative.” — Newsday
“Charming.” — Vogue
“The perfect setting for Tuck’s dark wit.” — The New Yorker
“The episodic style achieves many lovely moments…images are so vivid you can almost smell them.” — Washington Post Book World
“THE NEWS FROM PARAGUAY captures the physical beauty of an exotic land in Tuck’s characteristically exact, evocative prose.” — Publishers Weekly
“Elegant …the author’s research is impressive … a rich and rewarding read.” — Publishers Weekly
“Impressively researched, lushly written… a splendid realization if its rich subject and Tuck’s best so far.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“A gripping read.” — Library Journal
“Decorous detail and vivid imagery.” — Los Angeles Times
“Vivid, intriguing . . . Tuck brings to life the lush, sensual, and brutal world of 19th-century Paraguay.” — Entertainment Weekly
“Beautifully written.” — Time
“Reminiscent of Gabriel Garcia Marquez ... Tuck brings characters fully to life.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer
From the Back Cover
For him it began with a bright blue parrot feather that fell from Ella Lynch's hat when she was horseback riding in the Bois de Boulogne. The year was 1854, and Francisco Solano Lopez -- "Franco," the future dictator of Paraguay -- began his courtship of the young, beautiful Irishwoman with a poncho, a Paraguayan band, and a horse named Mathilde.
From Paris, Ella Lynch follows Franco to Asunción, where she reigns as his mistress. Isolated and estranged in this new world, she embraces her lover's ill-fated dream -- one fueled by outsize imperial ambition and heedless arrogance, and with devastating consequences for Paraguay and all its inhabitants.
A historical epic that tells an unusual love story, The News from Paraguay offers a kaleidoscopic portrait of nineteenth-century Paraguay, a largely untouched wilderness where Europeans and North Americans intermingle with both the old Spanish aristocracy and native Guaraní Indians.
The urgency of the narrative, the imaginative richness of its intimate detail, and the wealth of characters whose stories are skillfully layered and unfolded recall the epic novels of Gabriel García Márquez and Mario Vargas Llosa. The News from Paraguay captures the devastating havoc wrought on both a country's fate and a woman's heart by ruthless ambition and war.
About the Author
Born in Paris, LILY TUCK is the author of four previous novels: Interviewing Matisse, or the Woman Who Died Standing Up; The Woman Who Walked on Water; Siam, or the Woman Who Shot a Man, which was nominated for the 2000 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction; and The News from Paraguay, winner of theNational Book Award. She is also the author of the biography Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante. Her short stories have appeared in The New Yorker and are collected in Limbo and Other Places I Have Lived. Lily Tuck divides her time between Maine and New York City.
From The Washington Post
Lopez's cause was as obscure as it was doomed, involving mostly his outsized ego and delusions of adequacy. The War of the Triple Alliance nonetheless lasted five years, destroyed Paraguay's meager economy and killed more than half the male population, including Lopez. His Irish mistress, Ella Lynch, however, survived.
The story of Ella and the dictator she called Franco has the stuff of high drama. Lily Tuck opens her pointillist novel about them in Paris of 1854, where a blue feather falling from Ella's hat entrances Franco as they ride in the Bois de Boulogne. Through small and disconnected set pieces of journal entries, letters, conversations and little incidents, we grasp that Franco is the playboy son of Paraguay's current caudillo and Ella is a lovely young courtesan making her nimble way from bed to bed in French high society.
Tuck's style in these early pages is as effective and swift as in her earlier and most successful novel, Siam. By page 30, our two unsentimental opportunists are together in South America, and Ella is pregnant. Many images are so vivid you can almost smell them: the abattoirs of Buenos Aires, where cattle are killed only for their hides and the flayed carcasses are left to rot in the street; the whirring clouds of birds and teeming jungle flora on the couple's trip upriver to Asuncion; the broken arm that hurts, festers and finally kills Ella's young maidservant.
But one keeps waiting for the moment when Ella will become an appealing human being, or when Franco will reveal the charisma he must have had, or when his sisters will emerge from their fat-slob stereotypes to become real people. Instead they stay remote and rather hard-edged, never engaging our emotions. The episodic style achieves many lovely moments but becomes tiresome as it introduces and then discards dozens of people who could be memorable. These include assorted diplomats, soldiers, relatives and Franco's adversaries, the legendary Brazilian Emperor Don Pedro and the Argentine Gen. Bartoleme Mitre, leaving each so unexplored and fleeting that they all become nearly interchangeable. One keeps flipping back to see who these characters are exactly, wondering if perhaps this colonel or that landowner will prove central to the story. They don't -- or rather, they are all equally relevant, evidently brought in because of their historical role in what actually happened.
That is unfortunate. It is a rule of serious fiction that there's no excuse for putting something in a novel just because it really happened. The sheer sprawl of Tuck's subject matter seems to have overwhelmed her; she has put it all into her story without focus, rather than pruning away the undergrowth to showcase the two lovers or to illumine the history they created. At the end nothing seems to have led to anything else, the myriad challenges and privations of war simply happen without transforming the characters' understanding, and key events transpire without context -- the war seems to have started and ended on its own. We emerge with neither a grasp of the historical period nor any feeling for its shapers, real or fictional.
"Of course there was an Ella Lynch who was beautiful and misguided, there was a Francisco Solano Lopez who was cruel and ambitious," Tuck says in her author's note at the end of the book. "The need to explain and the need to dramatize are often at odds. What, then, the reader may wonder, is fact and what is fiction? My general rule of thumb is whatever seems most improbable is probably true."
Perhaps this frustrating approach is meant to evoke the disjointed nature of human experience, the measuring out of lives in coffee spoons, the inadequacy of memory, the sheer coquetry of chance and life and death, etc. If so, it is certainly just as frustrating as real life can be -- for example, when one is hoping to sit down with a vivid story and learn a little something about how to be a full human being while yet surviving during violent and turbulent times.
Reviewed by Joanne Omang
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper
- Publication date : May 4, 2004
- Edition : First Edition
- Language : English
- Print length : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0066209447
- ISBN-13 : 978-0066209449
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.62 x 0.93 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,484,965 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,583 in Historical World War II & Holocaust Fiction
- #4,221 in World War II Historical Fiction
- #64,077 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Lily Tuck was born in Paris and is the author of four previous novels – Interviewing Matisse, The Woman Who Walked on Water, the PEN/Faulkner award finalist Siam and The News From Paraguay, which won the National Book Award – as well as a collection of stories, Limbo, and Other Places I Have Lived. Her fiction has appeared in the New Yorker and the Paris Review. She lives in New York City.
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Customers find the book to be a very good read. However, the writing quality receives negative feedback, with several customers noting that it is written haphazardly.
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Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability.
"A very good read!" Read more
"...Save your time and money - very poor." Read more
"Though ambitious....and a wonderful peak at this little known history....the writing was disappointing after Tuck's I Married You for Love....a..." Read more
"I too purchased this book based on critic reviews (NY Times for one). It stinks...." Read more
Customers criticize the writing quality of the book, describing it as haphazardly written.
"...and a wonderful peak at this little known history....the writing was disappointing after Tuck's I Married You for Love....a profoundly moving..." Read more
"Good story but written haphazardly. No transitions. No flow. Hard for reader to figure out the place or time period." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2019Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseLily Tuck has written a beautiful book about a horrible man and his mysterious mistress. I read the book in anticipation of a trip to Paraguay. The story is about a time that changed Paraguay forever. Even if you don’t plan to visit Paraguay, you will be fascinated by the powerful characters who come to life with her pen. Madame Lynch is as complex and interesting as the dictator who needs her. This is my first Lily Tuck Book. I am eager to read others.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2004Format: HardcoverBy the time she is nineteen in 1854, Ella Lynch, an Irish beauty, is divorced and living in Paris, ready for a new romance. She finds her next paramour in the unlikely person of Francisco Solano Lopez, better known as the infamous Franco, the future dictator of Paraguay. Stout, dark and hirsute, Franco is immediately attracted to the blonde-haired Ella and determined to win her affections, showering her with expensive gifts. When Franco leaves Paris to return to his native Paraguay, Ella is by his side, where she will remain for many years. Although they never marry, she bears him five sons, an extraordinary fecund consort for the dictator.
Ella is a product of the Paris she so enjoyed, where she resided in elegant surroundings, spending her days at parties and royal fetes. For much of their time together, Franco is able to offer her much of the same, their days a continuous romantic adventure; never does she see him as the Emperor who has no clothes. Ella lives in a world of her own imagination, one of servants and plenty, her needs constantly attended, until Franco's war turns bad. Even then she follows him to the countryside until forced to flee for her safety.
The author approaches her subject with an eye to historical possibilities, filling in the lapses with vivid imagination, recreating a place and time long lost to memory. There is no question that Franco is a greatly flawed leader, a despot who deprives his citizens of their livelihood in an effort to establish Paraguay as a military power. His hubris costs the lives of many young men; torture and starvation descend upon the survivors, while Franco skirmishes to the bitter end, his decimated troops dwindling before the advancing swords of the Brazilians.
The author recreates the brilliant and exotic Paraguayan landscape, a lush background for the unfolding drama of an ill-conceived war. Tuck's Ella is a self-absorbed, spoiled woman whose beauty allows her to rise above the poverty and turmoil of ordinary life. She turns a blind eye to Franco's arrogance and destruction and never questions his ability to rule. This is a fascinating view of a couple who are defined by their physical differences, yet perhaps drawn together by their similarities. Tuck constructs a portrait of an exotic country, flourishing before it is gutted by one man's Napoleonic fantasies, his blonde, blue-eyed paramour proudly riding at his side. Luan Gaines/2004.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2015Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThough ambitious....and a wonderful peak at this little known history....the writing was disappointing after Tuck's I Married You for Love....a profoundly moving novel about love and life and its gifts and disappointments...developed in a Woolfian, stream of consciousness sort of way...
- Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2005Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseOne has to read this novel on its own terms. Many readers seem to have let their expectations prevent them from seeing the book for what it really is: an elegant work of imagination, observing few of the conventions of the historical novel. If you are looking for a romantic tale featuring characters with whom you feel an instant affinity, don't read this book. But if you are interested in the writer's craft, you will enjoy and admire this novel, and perhaps understand why it won the National Book Award.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2011Format: PaperbackThis could have been a juicy, rousing historical novel, but it's not. Instead, it flits among a zillion characters, most of whom are not sufficiently fleshed out to render them memorable. The only ones I could really keep up with were Franco Lopez, who becomes Paraguay's diabolical dictator in the mid-1800s, his Irish pseudo-wife Ella Lynch, Franco's fat sisters Rafaela and Inocencia, and Franco and Ella's son Pancho. Their other sons (four?) were as indistinguishable as Franco's brothers, various military personnel, diplomats, and Ella's ladies-in-waiting. Reading this book ranks right up there with watching paint dry. Blinded by the gold National Book Award sticker on the cover, I had high expectations. Plus, I thought it would augment my next-to-non-existent body of knowledge about Paraguay. Now I at least know that Paraguay was warring with Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay at the same time that the U.S. was engaged in civil war. However, that nugget of information does not nearly suffice to make this a worthwhile read. I might have enjoyed a more straightforward fictional portrait of Ella. She certainly invites comparisons with that other influential South American woman, Eva Peron, in that she's aligned herself with a powerful man and shows some pluck. At one point, Ella accompanies Franco and Pancho to the front, and, in the midst of sweltering heat and muddy, swamp terrain, asks herself why she doesn't just return to Europe. Good question.
