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Overview
Saudade. An inventive and poetic novel about a young woman's search for self-expression in a world without sound. Clara is born without the capacity to hear in the exotic Azores, where her people are haunted by the legends, literature, and mystery of these Portuguese islands. In her youth she moves to northern California, where her heritage continues to color her newfound landscape. Drawing upon her own spiritual resources, she creates her own languages in unusual, universal forms, her heightened senses reaching out to feel life at its most sensual, raw, and primal.Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
Magic abounds in the lives and minds of the characters of Vaz's haunting, lyrical debut set in the Portuguese Azores and the U.S. from the 1950s to 1998. When Clara Cruz is born deaf, her parents use the vibrations of seashells to ``show'' her sounds. Neighbor Maria Josefa teaches the girl a bizarre form of speech and shows her how to create iridescent art from fish scales. After her parents' death, greedy Father Teo Eiras takes Clara to California, where her mother had inherited some property, but he cheats her of profits from the land. In revenge, Clara seduces the priest and bears their son, who is born with a dreadful wound, ``a split down the middle of him from chest to stomach, so that he could show her his heart,'' Clara thinks. Solitary Helio Soares, who has an eye disease which makes objects seem speckled, cures Clara of an illness, and they become lovers. By the novel's end Clara has learned a great deal about their love and about herself. Language and the power of narrative are at the heart of this enchanting story. Suspending disbelief, one willingly enters Vaz's unique mystical world, in which colors sing and sugar can be used as a mode of speech, in which ghosts appear regularly and lovemaking is wonderfully strange and original. The audience that appreciated Like Water for Chocolate should find this novel equally appealing. (June)Library Journal
This wonderfully inventive novel, which contains elements of magic realism, is infused with a sense of saudade-a Portuguese word that, according to the author, can be understood as an extremely intense longing for a time, place, or people. The major characters come from the Portuguese Azores, whose folktales, beliefs, and practices form a leitmotif throughout the novel. Young Clara, mute since birth, loses her parents. Before dying, her mother had hoped to insure her daughter's welfare by signing over the deed to land in California to the local priest on his promise to take Clara there with him and look after her. In California, Clara discovers her voice, but any happiness she may have had is overwhelmed by the anger she feels toward the priest, who has cheated her out of her inheritance. Seduction, childbirth, the priest's exile, and the death of an infant result from Clara's reaction to the situation. The love of a widower helps Clara move beyond grief to discover a world of color and growth. First novelist Vaz has written a challenging and rewarding work of fiction. Recommended for larger fiction collections.-Robert Andrews, Duluth P.L., Minn.Book Details
Published
July 1, 1996
Publisher
Saint Martin's Press Inc.
Pages
297
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780312144081