Las madres A novel

Esmeralda Santiago

Book - 2023

"A powerful novel of family, race, faith, sex, and disaster that moves between Puerto Rico and The Bronx, revealing the lives and loves of five women and the secret that binds them together"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Esmeralda Santiago (author)
Edition
First United States edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780307962614
9780345803894
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Santiago follows the lives of three Puerto Rican moms and their daughters as they juggle their sense of duty to their families and to their homeland while protectively guarding secrets and values they hold dear. The story mostly centers on Luz, tall and Black and from a progressive-minded family in Puerto Rico who is an accomplished student and ballet dancer. Just before her sixteenth birthday, her life is upended by a devastating car accident that leaves her orphaned and suffering brain trauma. Alternating between 1975 and 2017, the story depicts a difficult yet fulfilling life for Luz as she moves to New York and becomes a mom to Marysol, seemingly unperturbed by her tragic past, the full extent of which readers will slowly become privy to as the novel progresses. Santiago's large cast of characters also includes Graciela, Marysol's best friend and the daughter of Shirley and Ada, Luz's closest friends. The past and present collide when all five take a fateful trip to Puerto Rico and encounter locals who hold secrets about what Luz left behind.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Santiago (Conquistadora) delivers an immersive intergenerational saga set in New York City, Maine, and Puerto Rico. Lesbian couple Ada and Shirley and their friend Luz are the "las madres" of the title; Luz's daughter Marysol, whose apartment is across the hall from her mom's in the Bronx, and Ada and Shirley's daughter Graciela, who lives near her mothers in coastal Maine, are "las nenas." Marysol and Graciela were born in the U.S. but feel a visceral attachment to Puerto Rico, their mothers' "homeland." As the group prepares for a trip to the island to celebrate Shirley's 70th birthday in 2017, Graciela, who has been told by Ada and Shirley that she was conceived by Ada in a long-forgotten one-night stand, "wonders whether DNA testing might shed some light on her parentage." Meanwhile, flashbacks to mid-1970s Puerto Rico recount an accident that left an adolescent Luz with a traumatic brain injury, and when an unexpected turn of events brings the group to familiar Puerto Rican neighborhoods, long-held family secrets threaten to surface. Santiago wrings palpable emotion from her characters, and hauntingly portrays Hurricane María's devastating effect on the island. There are false notes, including Graciela's characterization-via-hashtag ("she considers herself #spiritual"), but also a profound sincerity. This tenderhearted story of trauma and recovery has undeniable appeal. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Puerto Rican woman displaced from her home and her own past builds a surprising life. Teenage Luz Peña Fuentes is happy growing up in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1975. Her doting parents, Salvadora and Federico, are multilingual research scientists who provide their only child with a warm home and complete support for the lessons she hopes will lead to a career as a ballerina. Their love helps counter the bullying she sometimes suffers as "the tallest girl and the only Black one" in the ballet school. But a car crash destroys Luz's world, killing her parents and leaving her with serious physical and mental disabilities. She has no memory of her earlier life--a small mercy in that she can't remember the accident and, for a short time, she forgets what racism is. For the rest of her life, the few memories she can hang onto will be secondhand--the memories others tell her about, not her own. The novel alternates between Luz's girlhood and her life four decades later in the Bronx in 2017, where her grandfather took her to live after the accident. He's gone now, but Luz has a family circle to support her. Two of them are women who have cared for her since the accident: a lesbian couple named Shirley and Ada. Luz, Shirley, and Ada call themselves las madres. The rest of the circle is las nenas: Luz's daughter, Marysol, and Ada and Shirley's daughter, Graciela. Luz functions well in some ways--she married and had Marysol, then lost her young husband in another tragic event. She makes a living as an artist but still has almost no memory and is dependent on the other four women in daily life. To help answer Marysol's longing to understand more about her mother's past and her native Puerto Rico, the five women plan a vacation there--in hurricane season--that will be full of unexpected challenges and shocking revelations. As can happen in novels with narratives split between different time periods, in this one the chapters set in the 1970s are more vivid and engaging than many of those set in the present, which can bog down in extended passages of exposition. Luz's shattered memory serves to a degree as a metaphor for the Puerto Rican diaspora and the lasting effects of colonialism, but the book's core is its strong female friendships. An unusual take on the power of memory. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Luz July 4, 2017 After Luz Peña Fuentes settled in the United States, the accent mark over the n in Peña was left out in English. In Spanish her full name means "Light Rock Fountains" but without the tilde, Pena Fuentes means "Sorrow Fountains" or "Penalty Fountains" or "Pity Fountains" or "Shame Fountains." "Crossing an ocean made me sadder," she tells her daughter, Marysol Ríos Peña, whose first name in English means "Sea-and-Sun." "I'd rather be rock than sorrow." "You are who you believe you are, Mom. Your name and your identity are different things." "Sí, eso es verdad. That's a good way to look at it." Luz makes note of Marysol's words in her journal. At a clinic, Luz is annoyed when a nurse calls for Mrs. Pena. "Am I Señora Pitiful?" "No, Mom. Far from it. You have a good life and you're loved. Nothing to pity there." Luz doesn't have to add that to the page. At fifty-seven years old, and in spite of some old injuries and age-related creaks and aches, she's physically fit, has satisfying work, and lives comfortably. On weekdays, Marysol walks Luz to Mi Casa Adult Daycare, around the corner from their home. There, Luz feeds patients, wheels them from one table to another when they want to play cards or dominoes, keeps them company in the garden behind the building, and three times a week, leads them in chair-bound exercises. She often interrupts her tasks to add entries in her journal. When the pages are full, she shelves the journal next to those already arranged in her living room, the spines labeled by day, month, and year so she can later consult what she did when, with whom, and where. She reads her memory books with the same excitement and engagement she does beloved novels, finding new details with each reading. Sketches, drawings, cartoons, tickets from visits to a museum, the theater, the zoo, or the Botanical Gardens interrupt her looping handwriting. She lingers on the text or on the details that evoke a memory, a curiosity, a revelation. This is my life, she'll tell herself, and just as often, Is this my life? The statement does not invalidate the question. After work and dinner, Luz enters her studio, formerly Marysol's childhood bedroom. On the wall, Luz has lettered peña on a granite slab her friends brought from the abandoned quarry near their house in Maine. Now Luz prepares the materials for her next art project. Soon after she met Danilo, the man who became her husband, Luz drew his portrait on a stone she picked up in Van Cortlandt Park. He liked it so much, she gave him a self-portrait for their first wedding anniversary. A year later, she painted Marysol's image and for every birthday after that. Marysol now displays them in her apartment across the hall in their two-family house. The portraits began as a hobby, but friends and neighbors begged Luz to paint their children or their favorite singers or movie stars. Soon, she had commissions from strangers. This week, she's working on a series for a family who sent photographs and stones from their Vermont property. Luz has laid out the stones on her table, has cleaned and prepared their surfaces, but before she turns the lights off in her studio, another one catches her eye. It's green slate, one inch thick, ten inches long by three and a half inches wide, too big and distinctive for the family group. Its boundaries are like the map of Puerto Rico on her wall, the landmass wider on the left, shaped like a dog's snout, and narrower toward what would be the canine's tail. Inspired, she writes a reminder to create a portrait of the island with its rivers, lakes, and mountain ranges as a Christmas gift for Marysol. She scrolls through stock images of Puerto Rico on her computer, and is overcome. It's her last Navidades in Puerto Rico. She's fifteen, a ballet dancer poised for her cue, the first notes of a sparkling Tchaikovsky suite imminent, her muscles vibrating. She's about to perform solo on a shimmering stage meant to simulate fog, her tutu speckled with rhinestones, her satin pointe shoes secured by ribbons. She tries to hold on to the moment but it dissipates as quickly as it appeared. Eighteen months after that performance, Luz was whisked from San Juan, a sixteen-year-old healing from physical and emotional trauma, mired in grief and loss, her memories diffused and disjointed. As the plane lifted into the sky toward New York, Luz left behind what happened that fateful summer of fireworks, Bicentennial celebrations, and perfect 10s in the Olympic Games. Luz has forgotten so much, she's sure she's invented most of her life so she can say she's Luz Peña Fuentes. On July 4, 2017, she vaguely remembers that dancing girl in Puerto Rico, strong as a rock, who in the United States is sorrowful, penalized, shamed, and pitiful. Excerpted from Las Madres: A Novel by Esmeralda Santiago All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.