![]() ![]() There, an aunt, La Inca, with strange, possibly supernatural powers, heals and saves Beli after her involvement with one of Trujillo’s minor henchman, who was married to the dictator’s sister. In earthy, streetwise, Spanish-interlaced prose, Díaz links overweight, nerdy fantasist Oscar, his combative, majestic sister and their once Amazonian mother to the island of their ancestry. Its wider focus is an indictment of the terrible Trujillo regime and its aftermath, but the approach is oblique, traced backwards via the children (Oscar and Lola) of a larger-than-life but ruined Dominican matriarch, Beli. A rich, impassioned vision of the Dominican Republic and its diaspora, filtered through the destiny of a single family.Īfter a noted debut volume of short stories ( Drown, 1996), Díaz pens a first novel that bursts alive in an ironic, confiding, exuberant voice. ![]()
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