Angela of the Stones

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories, Literary
Cover of the book Angela of the Stones by Amanda Hale, Thistledown Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Amanda Hale ISBN: 9781771871662
Publisher: Thistledown Press Publication: October 1, 2018
Imprint: Thistledown Press Language: English
Author: Amanda Hale
ISBN: 9781771871662
Publisher: Thistledown Press
Publication: October 1, 2018
Imprint: Thistledown Press
Language: English

Cuba is the place where the grandchildren of peasants become consultant surgeons, but also the place where necessity as the mother of invention is put into extreme practise. In Havana, the buildings like the peoples’ dreams, are constantly being restored. But so too in the rural districts, in towns like Baracoa, you will find boisterous people who idolised the Fidel past and continue to mourn his passing while those like Godofredo, born in January 1959 as a victorious Fidel marched into Havana, limps along the streets of Baracoa where he encounters tourists and townspeople while maintaining his anonymity as the peanut vendor. In Amanda Hale’s stories, Cuba comes alive with a gentle humour and through the richly detailed portraits of the families of Baracoa as they struggle with the political changes that are reshaping Cuba. Meet Daniela who flies from the roof into the arms of her unfaithful husband; Sonia who marvels at the new world of her cell-phone crazy teenagers; Tito, a world away in Miami, who rants about Obama’s handshake with Raúl Castro; and witness a corpse that travels the length of Cuba and back in a nightmare of bureaucracy, all while Ángela huddles for the night on her bench in Parque Central.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Cuba is the place where the grandchildren of peasants become consultant surgeons, but also the place where necessity as the mother of invention is put into extreme practise. In Havana, the buildings like the peoples’ dreams, are constantly being restored. But so too in the rural districts, in towns like Baracoa, you will find boisterous people who idolised the Fidel past and continue to mourn his passing while those like Godofredo, born in January 1959 as a victorious Fidel marched into Havana, limps along the streets of Baracoa where he encounters tourists and townspeople while maintaining his anonymity as the peanut vendor. In Amanda Hale’s stories, Cuba comes alive with a gentle humour and through the richly detailed portraits of the families of Baracoa as they struggle with the political changes that are reshaping Cuba. Meet Daniela who flies from the roof into the arms of her unfaithful husband; Sonia who marvels at the new world of her cell-phone crazy teenagers; Tito, a world away in Miami, who rants about Obama’s handshake with Raúl Castro; and witness a corpse that travels the length of Cuba and back in a nightmare of bureaucracy, all while Ángela huddles for the night on her bench in Parque Central.

More books from Thistledown Press

Cover of the book A Run on Hose by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Backwater Mystic Blues by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book In the Embrace of the Alligator by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Sophie, In Shadow by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book You're In Canada Now . . . by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Mennonites Don't Dance by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book The Mystery of the Mad Science Teacher by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Living with the hawk by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Bindy's Moon by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book We Don't Listen to Them by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Featherless Bipeds by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Memoir of a Good Death by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Autant by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Hamburger by Amanda Hale
Cover of the book Leaving Berlin by Amanda Hale
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy