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Hispanic Americans - Fiction & Literature, Character Types - Fiction
Reclaiming Paris by Fabiola Santiago — book cover

Reclaiming Paris

by Fabiola Santiago
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Overview

Miami Herald prize-winning journalist Fabiola Santiago tells the story of a woman who switches perfumes every time she changes lovers along her journey to heal from the loss of family and country.

An exuberant poet and historical archivist living in contemporary Miami, Marisol, like her adopted city, is a sensual free spirit. Reclaiming Paris is a paean to place and memory, lavished with humor, passion, and unforgettable characters.

Synopsis

"Men are like perfumes. In an instant, with nothing but a whiff of judgment, I either love them or discard them."

Marisol is an exuberant poet and historical archivist living in contemporary Miami. Like her adopted city, she's a sensual free spirit. Born in Cuba and transplanted at an early age to Florida, she nurses a nostalgia for the legendary island birthplace she barely remembers. She also harbors a passion for scents, donning a new perfume each time she takes on a new relationship. After the death of her beloved grandmother and a series of sensuous but disappointing romances, Marisol realizes that she must break free from the shackles of her history, abandon lost causes, and embrace the only real home she's ever had — her own wandering heart. Freed at last from yearning for old Havana, "the Paris of the Caribbean," this romantic exile must embrace a new life. Although she cannot reclaim Havana, she can experience the real thing — Paris — so Marisol sets out with an open ticket to chart the course of her future.

Bridging the divide between the effervescent Miami of today and the mystical Cuba of yesteryear, Reclaiming Paris is a paean to place and memory, rich with humor, passion, and unforgettable characters.

Publishers Weekly

Santiago, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her coverage of Elian González in the Miami Herald, makes her fiction debut with this flat immigrants' saga. Marisol, an historian for the Miami Museum of History, recounts in jumbled retrospect the tale of her sometimes idealized, sometimes difficult childhood in Cuba. After her father's early death and her mother's subsequent unbalance, Marisol is raised by her loving abuela ("grandma"), and the two emigrate to the Cuban Miami of the Vietnam era. Santiago focuses on Marisol's love life, from her first crush as a little girl to a succession of Miami émigrés, including a political refugee who despises the bourgeois life to which Marisol aspires, and a cardiologist who shares Marisol's nostalgic yearnings for the Cuba of old, but will not leave his wife for her. Different perfumes delineate various phases of Marisol's life (with Wind Song, White Linen and others serving as section headings). Santiago brings together the expected elements of an immigrant's tale of self-discovery and redemption, but there's little drive behind Marisol's diaristic narration. Along with the perfume conceit, the Parisian connection, made explicit by the end, feels contrived.

About the Author, Fabiola Santiago

Fabiola Santiago has been a writer and editor for The Miami Herald since 1980. She was the founding city editor of the Spanish-language El Nuevo Herald, and shared in a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Elián

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Santiago, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her coverage of Elian González in the Miami Herald, makes her fiction debut with this flat immigrants' saga. Marisol, an historian for the Miami Museum of History, recounts in jumbled retrospect the tale of her sometimes idealized, sometimes difficult childhood in Cuba. After her father's early death and her mother's subsequent unbalance, Marisol is raised by her loving abuela ("grandma"), and the two emigrate to the Cuban Miami of the Vietnam era. Santiago focuses on Marisol's love life, from her first crush as a little girl to a succession of Miami émigrés, including a political refugee who despises the bourgeois life to which Marisol aspires, and a cardiologist who shares Marisol's nostalgic yearnings for the Cuba of old, but will not leave his wife for her. Different perfumes delineate various phases of Marisol's life (with Wind Song, White Linen and others serving as section headings). Santiago brings together the expected elements of an immigrant's tale of self-discovery and redemption, but there's little drive behind Marisol's diaristic narration. Along with the perfume conceit, the Parisian connection, made explicit by the end, feels contrived.

Kirkus Reviews

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Santiago's debut novel is a romantic ode to Cuba, "the Paris of the Caribbean," and its diaspora. A story that begins with a love affair gone sour blossoms into a lush tale of sensory delights, history and memory. Marisol, who fled Cuba as a child with her abuela (grandmother), juggles being true to her Cuban heritage and navigating life in Miami as an independent, free-thinking woman. As she seeks happiness with a series of men, many of them also Cuban exiles, she tries to discover who she is and the role Cuba has in her life. Memory is the leitmotif that dances through the pages-from "the sands of my best childhood memories" to the things she cannot remember, such as the cause of her father's death or her mother's madness. Only when she unravels the mystery that clouded her childhood can she find true happiness within her heart. Santiago weaves together tales of longing for the lost paradise of prerevolutionary Cuba and the reality of exile in Miami. While Marisol's over-the-top romantic, doomed affairs (and her penchant to mark each affair with a distinctive perfume) come across as a bit much, the author balances them with tales from the past, laden with references to Cuban history, literature and music. Her description of Cuban life in Miami, from the rich cultural life the immigrants have created in their new homeland to the city's political machinations, is the picture of a culture that is mournful yet impassioned, striving to succeed in its new land while yearning for the old. Cuban and Latino readers will find much to identify with in this richly nuanced novel, and others will find it a fascinating inside look at a culture that is too often viewedas monolithic and alien. A true rarity-an erotic yet intelligent tale. Agent: Thomas Colchie/The Colchie Agency

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2009
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781416551133

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