Book Review: The Distance Between Us
Are any of you part of an immigrant family? Have you ever had to experience the trauma of being separated from your family? Well in this novel Reyna Grande has. Reyna’s father, Natlio, had left to the United states in search of providing a better life for his family, but soon after Reyna’s mother had to immigrate to the United States in order to help. Mago (Magloria) , Carlos, and Reyna were left behind very young by their parents, hardly having a father figure to look up to and only memories of their mother too long to. This caused feelings of hate, empathy, loneliness and emotional suffering throughout their childhood and adulthood. These three siblings experienced physical and emotional violence after immigrating into the U.S. with their “father”, in search of being part of a family once more. They didn’t have a choice, but to stay with their father after being abandoned by their mother many times. “The Distance Between Us” emphasizes that they longed for their family to be united once again, but soon after they realized that the distance between them was not the only thing separating them, but the emotional gap that didn’t allow them to be together.
In this heartbreaking novel, Reyna uses hope, love and forgiveness to bring the reader along with her never imaginable experiences. Reyna’s struggles evolved around her sister specifically and her father. Throughout her childhood, Reyna looked up to her older sister, Mago, as her “little mother” and had a strong connection with her sister. After immigrating to the United States, that bond changed after realizing that in her fathers eye’s Mago would always be the first one to make him proud. This created competition between Reyna and her sister, but soon it led to Reyna being left alone when her two siblings turned out to disappoint their family, leaving Reyna with no support from her father to pursue her dreams. With all of the chaos in her life Reyna managed to find her safe place in writing and found the courage to leave her toxic household behind.
Since Reyna was a little girl she had always wanted her father to return to them, and found fault when it came to her father destroying her family. Like many others, Reyna thought that her whole life was meant to make others proud and how afraid she felt specifically when it came to being abandoned by those who she loved. Soon after, Reyna realized that she had accomplished so much, despite the doubt, violence, and the resentment she felt toward her family's actions. “I thought about my father holding my hand, about how afraid I was that he would go of me.” She
Had come across this feeling every time she felt that she was not strong enough to be without those who she loved, especially the moment she realizes she is finally part of her father’s life. Reyna realized that she had gotten so far without support from the people she most loved, and she saw herself “ at the water’s edge, holding tightly to my father’s calloused hand. And I let it go.” I personally really enjoyed and identified with this book because Reyna does a great job of conveying her feelings of solitary, even though she always had hoped that things would soon turn out to be how she had always imagined. This is demonstrated when Reyna states that the man she idealized did not exist.
For readers like me that have identified with the lesson Reyna’s novel, The Distance Between Us, which is that distance is not only physical, but cut’s deep into our emotions too that separates us from others. For unfamiliar readers, this novel might convey a different perspective of the struggles not a lot of people go through on a daily basis when it comes to the separation not only physically but emotionally of those who you love.