Overview
For middle-aged Cecilia, the rainforest represents both solace and tenuously controlled danger, as she discovers when she follows the same path each day from her hotel at a Brazilian spa into the surrounding jungle. Although her daily forays are designed to help leave her painful past behind, Cecilia’s thoughts return to her deceased husband, her drug-addicted son, and her own place in the world. These thoughts are her only company until the present intrudes once more in the unlikely form of a fellow patient at the spa, a North American man who might represent a second chance.
In The Rainforest, the award-winning novelist Alicia Steimberg offers the reader new definitions of happiness and mature love—or perhaps simply the reassurance that in life, nothing is ever quite as terrible as one fears or quite as glorious as one remembers.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
In a novel as fragmented and verdant as memory itself, Argentine author Steimberg (Call Me Magdalena) creates a troubled Argentine writer, a widow in her late 50s who seeks comfort and recovery at a convalescent spa in the lush Brazilian rain forest. In scraps of tortured writing, dreams and unbidden recollections, Cecilia examines her relationships with three men: her deceased second husband, Dardo; Federico, the violent drug-addicted son she has cut out of her life; and Steve, a biologist from Los Angeles with whom she falls in love. She reveals her past with both self-recrimination and self-justification, especially the brutal scenes with Federico. Cecilia believes that true healing-of the cancers that kill husbands, of the addictions that destroy sons and of the guilt that torment mothers-would require recoding DNA, rewriting history and, finally, erasing memory itself. She can't undo the past, any more than she can escape herself. The question this reflective novel finally poses is whether Cecilia is strong enough to risk the possibility of a future with a man who is, ultimately, as imperfect and mortal as she is. (Sept.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.Library Journal
From Argentine novelist Steimberg, winner of her native country's Premio Planeta Biblioteca del Sur for Cuando digo Magdalena (Call Me Magdalena), comes a poetically written and beautifully translated perspective on personal happiness, solace, and mature love. Middle-aged Cecilia has got trouble on her mind-the devastation of her husband's death, the pain inflicted on her by her drug-addicted son, and her need to redefine herself. To assuage her anxiety, she meanders daily into the Brazilian rain forest abutting her hotel/spa, even though these walks could just as easily cause her injury. Then one day she meets a fellow spa patient named Steve, who hails from North America. As their relationship slowly develops, Cecilia comes to view life differently: when things are bad, they can still be good. Fortuitously, Cecilia is willing to risk everything with Steve. Recommended for all collections.-Sofia A. Tangalos, SUNY at Buffalo Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.Booklist
"Labinger's melodic translation lyrically enhances Steimberg's potently symbolic portrait of a woman in transition."—BooklistMultiCultural Review
“Steimberg’s eloquent and engrossing tale flows smoothly. . . . Steimberg has created an unforgettable protagonist who captures the sympathies of the reader as she attempts to overcome the tragedies of her life.” —Roberta Gordenstein, MultiCultural ReviewMD) Tower Light (Towson
“Steimberg’s prose is extraordinary: by turns earthy and ethereal, it is always compelling.”
Tower Light
“Steimberg’s prose is extraordinary: by turns earthy and ethereal, it is always compelling.”—Tower Light (Towson, MD)Publishers Weekly
"In a novel as fragmented and verdant as memory itself, Argentine author Steimberg (Call Me Magdalena) creates a troubled Argentine writer, a widow in her late 50s who seeks comfort and recovery at a convalescent spa in the lush Brazilian rain forest. In scraps of tortured writing, dreams and unbidden recollections, Cecilia examines her relationships with three men: her deceased second husband, Dardo; Federico, the violent drug-addicted son she has cut out of her life; and Steve, a biologist from Los Angeles with whom she falls in love. . . . The question this reflective novel finally poses is whether Cecilia is strong enough to risk the possibility of a future with a man who is, ultimately, as imperfect and mortal as she is."—Publishers Weekly
Library Journal
"From Argentine novelist Steimberg . . . comes a poetically written and beautifully translated perspective on personal happiness, solace, and mature love."—Library Journal