Cuzcatlán : where the Southern Sea beats / by Manlio Argueta ; translated from the Spanish by Clark Hansen

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: AventuraPublication details: New York : Vintage Books , 1987.Edition: 1st American edDescription: 255 p. ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 9780394742533
Uniform titles:
  • Cuzcatlán . English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • LAS FIC ARG
LOC classification:
  • PQ7539.2.A68 C813 1987
Summary: In this lyrical, episodic novel, Argueta, author of One Day of Life, celebrates the poor people of El Salvador (whose Indian name is Cuzcatlan). Focusing on several generations of a peasant family, the narrative shifts voice and perspective and steps back and forth in time, from the 1930s to the early 1980s. The characters change, but their situations remain the same. They seek merely to survive and to love, and when they are allowed to do so, the novel reads like the evocation of a simple earthly paradise. ("Juana's thoughts are like rain, they fall and fall until the sky is blue, clear.'') And yet contact with those in power is unavoidable and results in the peasants being exploited, beaten, kidnapped, and killed. (To the military and the bosses "poverty was communism.'') At the end of this novel, the youngest generation of the family devotes itself to the guerrilla struggle and indicts the most recent U.S. involvement: "They come to our country in big airplanes. They tour the countryside in their helicopters. They wear dark glasses so they can't see our light. They drive bulletproof Cherokees. They don't speak Spanish. How are they going to understand us like that?''
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Latin American Studies Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. LAS FIC ARG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 046025

In this lyrical, episodic novel, Argueta, author of One Day of Life, celebrates the poor people of El Salvador (whose Indian name is Cuzcatlan). Focusing on several generations of a peasant family, the narrative shifts voice and perspective and steps back and forth in time, from the 1930s to the early 1980s. The characters change, but their situations remain the same. They seek merely to survive and to love, and when they are allowed to do so, the novel reads like the evocation of a simple earthly paradise. ("Juana's thoughts are like rain, they fall and fall until the sky is blue, clear.'') And yet contact with those in power is unavoidable and results in the peasants being exploited, beaten, kidnapped, and killed. (To the military and the bosses "poverty was communism.'') At the end of this novel, the youngest generation of the family devotes itself to the guerrilla struggle and indicts the most recent U.S. involvement: "They come to our country in big airplanes. They tour the countryside in their helicopters. They wear dark glasses so they can't see our light. They drive bulletproof Cherokees. They don't speak Spanish. How are they going to understand us like that?''

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