This affectionate portrayal of a small Nicariguan town reveals humanity in all its beauty and ugliness This description may be from another edition of this product.
I did a double review and since I don't have time to seperate my thoughts on the two books, you get two for the price of one. Enjoy! Although Silvio Sirias' "Meet Me under the Ceiba" and Horacio Castellanos Moya's "The She-Devil in the Mirror" are both novels about a woman being murdered and both take place in Central America, that is where their similarities end. "Ceiba" is the story of a reporter investigating the murder of a lesbian woman, Adela, who would never hurt anyone. Everyone in the small Nicaraguan town seems convinced who committed the crime and they even put two people in jail for it. Although I was convinced these two people, the selfish mother of the victim's lover and the rich man she sold her daughter, Ixelia, to were evil, vile people, I was not convinced they physically committed the crime. The reporter talks to anyone who knows anything about Adela and her young lover, including the local priest who condemns their lifestyle and the judge who only wants justice for the victim and her family. "She-Devil," on the other hand, is told from the point of view of the murdered victim's "so called" best friend. As the story goes on, it becomes increasingly apparent that the narrator is quite jealous of her friend's life. While Olga Maria had a great husband and two beautiful daughters plus two or three lovers on the side, Laura, the unreliable narrator, is divorced with no children and seems utterly unhappy with her lot in life. Olga Maria owns a boutique while Laura doesn't seem to have any job or even to have had one in the past. Laura seems to have tried to have affairs with the same lovers that her friend slept with, though she claims she was just trying to help out her friend when she visits these lovers. Laura finally loses it when she discovers her friend slept with her lazy, totally un-sexy ex-husband while they were still married. Although it seems she discovers this later, as the narrator is relating all this to a (imaginary?) friend, we see that she is losing her bearings and ends up institutionalized. I had an on-line discussion with another reader who read into the story less than I did; he took everything at face value, so in the end, it is difficult to say what actually happened. I suspect that my female sensibilities bring a different perspective to the conclusion of the mystery. Both stories are filled with illicit sex between lovers, friends and even the occasional paid rendezvous, but "Ceiba" takes place in the countryside in Nicaragua, whereas "She-Devil" takes place in San Salvador, the capital. The poor people, barely eeking out a living in their little town, for the most part, are much more accepting of difference than the rich of San Salvador. Both authors show us how jealousy and can lead people to places that are worse than Hell and that money often is the root of all evil. Sirius really gets us into the mind of his protagonist, not a difficult task considering that he really was a reporter investigating
Well-written tragedy dealing with Nicaraguan politics and prejudice
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 14 years ago
Meet Me Under the Ceiba, written by Silvio Sirias, is the chronicle of the murder of a young woman named Adela by an unnamed researcher who became fascinated by her death. Through a series of interviews with her family, friends and even her murderers to try to piece together the events leading up to her death and her last moments. This book is not necessarily a mystery: we know who her murderers are from the very beginning and we know exactly why they killed her. The narrator uncovers small mysteries that paint a clearer picture of Adela's last day on earth, but what this is really about is giving Adela a fair representation, trying to uncover the lies that have been protecting her murderers. Adela, a lesbian, was passionately in love with the beautiful Ixelia, a gorgeous young woman who had been abused her whole life and was eventually sold by her mother into a relationship with Don Roque, a powerful and cruel older man. When Adela tries to rescue Ixelia from her fate, crosses the wrong paths and Don Roque and Ixelia's mother, Doña Erlinda, decide to get rid of her once and for all. Adela's story is tragic and heartbreaking; you spend most of the novel hoping that something will change, that Adela will be uncovered as alive. She was so obviously loved in her small community. I learned a lot about the state of LGBT rights in Nicaragua and it is very difficult to read about. In Nicaragua and much of Latin America, being part of the LGBT community means that in the eyes of some people, you are less than a person. During the investigation and the trial, many people simply referred to Adela as "la cochona", the dyke, never using her name. Adela is reduced to nothing but her sexuality, she no longer has an identity. Meet Me Under the Ceiba begins with a quote from Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel García Márquez: "none of us could continue living without an exact knowledge of the place and mission assigned to us by fate." There is certainly some inspiration from Chronicle of a Death Foretold in Sirias' narration, but it is more straightforward in Meet Me Under the Ceiba. There are many intriguing levels of narration since the story is told completely in flashbacks and interviews, the painful reality is that because Adela is no longer here, we will never really know what happened to her. Meet Me Under the Ceiba is an important novel. It addresses Nicaraguan LGBT rights and also the failure of the judicial system. Most importantly, it paints a tragic portrait of one woman's unfortunate death in the hopes of stopping future deaths. Siarias' story is based on the true murder of Aura Rosa Pavón and at the end he describes which aspects of the story were fact and which were fiction, but in the end I am so grateful that Sirias told this story, because it is absolutely one that needed to be heard. I definitely recommend Meet Me Under the Ceiba, not only for the important issues that it puts out into the open, but also because it i
Silvio Sirias's Keen Sense of Place
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 14 years ago
There is a reason Silvio Sirias was recently listed as one of [...] "2010 Top Ten 'New' Latino Authors to Watch (and Read)." Meet Me Under the Ceiba (like his last book, Bernardo and the Virgin) is a wonderfully told story AND a vibrant, accurate portrayal of everyday Nicaraguan life. I know because I have been to and lived in nearly all of the small villages where Sirias sets his stories. I can recognize actual street corners and dining rooms in his stories and I've met most of the people he writes about. Even if they are fictional, Sirias's books are peopled by strikingly real Nica characters and his narrative is peppered with sharp sensory details: the sickly sweet taste of Rojita cola, the sour smell of rum-breath, the young man wearing "an old, threadbare Cat-in-the-Hat T-shirt -- probably part of the U.S. shipment sent here after Hurricane Mitch." These details are spot-on and his descriptions do not waste a word. As for the story of Adela, the narrator of the book puts it best: "Adela Rugama's murder is a chilling story. It's a sobering portrait of human frailty, of what can happen when we allow our weaknesses, our emotional flaws, to take control of our actions. The tale of her death shows how greed, lust, and unrestrained passions can completely cloud our judgment. Just look at everything from your perspective; that is, the perspective of a priest: virtually every single commandment was broken ... Adela Rugama's murder becomes a remarkable moral tale."
Another supurb book by Mr Sirias
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Once again Mr. Sirias provides a masterfully written book full of shattered characters. Sirias does a skillful job of showing the details of life in Nicaragua, so that you can virtually see the scene in your mind's eye. He also develops the characters so that they seem real and you feel their pain. This book opens the reader's eyes to the atrocities that humans are capable of inflicting on each other.
i liked this book : )
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
i pre-ordered this book and read it within a couple of days of receiving it. I couldn't put it down. mr. sirias deftly weaves together the non-linear backstory to the headline "trio found guilty in the murder of a dyke." it's a topic that's not given much attention in nicaragua, so I was intrigued to find out more. I was not disappointed; the author vividly recreates the community and characters that played host to the tragedy. As a queer person who lived in nicaragua at the time the story unfolds, i can attest to its accurate portrayal of people and place as well as the "sub-human" perception of the victim that was used by the defense as an attempt to justify her murder. i thank you for writing this book. well done. I hope it gets translated into spanish, i will purchase a copy for my town's library.
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