by Omar S. "CastaÛeda ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 15, 1997
Magical-realist metafictional tricks effectively enliven this collection of cleverly interconnected stories from the Latino author of Among the Volcanoes (1991) and Abuela's Weave (1993). A sexually restless literature professor, the eponymous Dr. Naranjo, experiences a kind of compound delirium while romancing a willing woman student--as does, in a parallel story, his counterpart, one Omar CastaÛeda. It soon becomes clear that we're observing how a writer deals with the frustrations and confusions of his own life by reshaping it into fiction: fictions, as it happens, for this urbanely self-reflexive volume repeatedly recasts the same essential details in varying fictional forms. Among the liveliest are ""The Grackle,"" in which a housewife is harassed and enlightened by a talking bird with a broken wing (a creature that seems derivative of Malamud's ""The Jewbird,"" but let that go), and a trio of stories about maternal bereavement producing a spectrum of responses from combative anger through symbolic transcendence. An unusually imaginative and charming book.
Pub Date: May 15, 1997
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: 177
Publisher: Arte P£blico
Review Posted Online: N/A
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 1997
Categories: FICTION
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