book data
86 ratings, 3.42 average rating, 27 reviews
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published
2007
(first published 2008)
by Knopf
binding
Hardcover, 272 pages
isbn
030726436X
(isbn13: 9780307264367)
description
From the acclaimed author of Monkey Hunting (“A miracle of poetic compression . . . An epic of anecdotes, a vista of brief and beautif...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 134)
Read in July, 2008
Cristina Garcia conjures a magical cast of characters and flits between them at maddening pace in this latest work of hers. Each character comes from a different corner of the earth: Iran, El Salvador and Cuba. They connect and disconnect in the hyper-fantasized realms of Las Vegas and Los Angeles, while we get the breadth and culture of their native lands, which breathes spirit and life into Marta, Evaristo, Leila, and Enrique. What was most fascinating and artfully executed were the relatives ...more
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I reviewed this for Ms. Magazine's Spring 2007 issue. Here's an excerpt of that review (you can find it in full in the magazine):
We call the world small as we navigate our often technology-rich, travel-dense lives. A ping in your e-mail inbox signals an old friend who has found you on the internet, a stranger in the airplane seat next to you lived next door to your sister in college. Our lives don’t just touch each other’s, the sensation of a brushed shoulder in a train station stay...more
We call the world small as we navigate our often technology-rich, travel-dense lives. A ping in your e-mail inbox signals an old friend who has found you on the internet, a stranger in the airplane seat next to you lived next door to your sister in college. Our lives don’t just touch each other’s, the sensation of a brushed shoulder in a train station stay...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommended to Jody by:
Ardie
Story is of three young people growing up in different parts of the world, living very different lives. The story alternates between each of their existences as they grow up through the years dealing parents, children, love and work. As usual, I love the international-ness of it. While some of it takes place in the USA, none of the characters are Eurasian white, nor second generation American. From the book cover, I knew the characters would intersect, so I was really curious to see how that...more
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Read in November, 2008
Cristina Garcia created three likable, colorful characters, any of which had the potential for a great novel on his/her own. Then she inexplicably placed them all in the same novel and switched back and forth between their stories. The result is that we never really get to know any of them or their stories very well. Huge chunks of time are skipped over, and we reenter their lives feeling like we missed too much. There's never any sense as to why they're all in the same book, although they d...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone who wants to be introduced to interesting characters from diverse backgrounds.
I really liked this book. The characters were interesting - although flawed and not well suited to care for his son, I found the magician to be very likable. His love for his son was palpable, and his struggle to maintain his career took many interesting turns. The other characters also felt very real to me, and their intersections seemed plausible. Not always happy, but that seemed authentic. Garcia writes with such detail, and the characters and settings really came alive for me. There was a l...more
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Read in June, 2008
This book was really well written and the characters are engaging. Enrique is smart, good with numbers and takes care of his father, the only family he has left. Marta longs for children but babies her much older husband instead. Leila is the most baffling character - she seems so independent and strong willed but bows to her mother's demands and husband's tyranny. Family obligations, and the life decisions we make because of family, are evident throughout the book - family can be loving and nou...more
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Read in January, 2008
This is not the first book I have read by Garcia, but it is certainly the most memorable. Her characters are so funny and real, and the story so absorbing. The story begins with her three main characters as children in their points of origin (Cuba, El Salvador, and Iran) and over the years, their lives cross in the US. Garcia's language and description makes for an enjoyable read. I highly recommend this book to Cristina Garcia fans, and for those that don't know her, should read Dreaming in Cub...more
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Read in September, 2008
My regret was that I read the last page and almost immediately went to sleep. The story haunted my dreams. I should have given myself more time just to think about it because it was that interesting. Garcia threads together the lives of three fascinating people all of whom are displaced from their cultures in some way, and all of whom have parents who ultimately fail them.
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bookshelves:
middle-ground
Frustrating. Garcia has three wonderful characters here and an engrossing story that goes through about two decades, but the book is so short that I felt it was all spread too thin and that I wanted more of each segment, each character, to make it all really come to life. It's rare that I wish a book was longer, but this was definitely a good example of that.
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in August, 2008
The idea of the book had potential, but it fell short in execution. The quality of the writing was average and the elements of the story that were supposed to metaphorically or symbolically connect the characters (the recurring themes of birds and water) read awkwardly at times, like the author was trying too hard to work it in to the story.
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to ingrid by:
Read a review of it in the paper.
I loved this book and will look for others form the author. It is fiction, and beautifully written. It is a story of 3 people, who we get to know as children. Most of the book is their adult stories. One is from Cuba, one from El Salvador, and one from Iran. Do their stories intertwine? Read to find out.
It does pull at your heart.
It does pull at your heart.
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bookshelves:
bad-books-
I was so looking forward to this book, it's been listed by somebody special as the latin book of the month or whatever, but it felt to me like it was a stereotypical look at all of the characters who are not Cuban. For example (of course the Iranian woman is forced to marry by her family a man who is violent.)
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Read in September, 2007
This is one of those books where the 3 main characters seem to have completely separate lives (in this case one is from Iran, one El Salvador, and one a Cuban living in America), yet by the end of the book the 3 lives are intertwined. It was good, but the ending wasn't very satisfying for me.
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Read in March, 2008
This is a fairly good book, well written with interesting characters. But I guess I never really felt "grabbed" by it. I don't know how much I cared about the outcomes of the story lines.
I kept thinking there would be something more...
I kept thinking there would be something more...
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Read in November, 2007
not sure whether to label it 'shorts' or not - each chapter stands as a short story, but the characters and story lines pick back up after visiting a few other locations & people. i really enjoyed this book.
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bookshelves:
iran,
latin_america,
north_america
Read in October, 2007
Not may favorite book by Christina Garcia, but a good story. Garcia tells a story of luck (and misfortune) through three characters (from Cuba, El Salvador and Iran) whose lives become interconnected.
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You've got to enjoy this book. There are some problems with the plot, which never came together as I expected it to, but the dialog is sharp and funny and the individual scenes work well.
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Read in January, 2008
One of her best. I enjoyed all of the characters in the book and found it so amazing the ways their lives intertwined. The book had lots of insight into the lives of people in Los Angeles.
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Read in May, 2007
kind of like history of love and babel...how lives and cultures weave in and out of each other, connect and disconnect. it is also a story about taking chances. and i really liked it.
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bookshelves:
pleasure,
to-read
The author of Dreaming in Cuban weaves the interlinked stories of characters living and struggling in a variety of locales, including Las Vegas, El Salvador and Tehran. (c/o washpost)
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