|
|
|
Watercolor Women / Opaque Men: A Novel in Verse
|
Click for a closer view
|
Ana Castillo
List Price: $15.00
Our Price: $8.22
You Save: $6.78 (45%)
Availability:
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
|
|
|
|
|
Product Details
- Author: Ana Castillo
|
- Binding: Paperback
|
- Dewey Decimal Number: 811.54
|
- EAN: 9781931896207
|
- ISBN: 1931896208
|
- Label: Curbstone Press
|
- Manufacturer: Curbstone Press
|
- Number of Items: 1
|
- Number of Pages: 160
|
- Product Group: Book
|
- Publication Date: 2005-09-01
|
- Publisher: Curbstone Press
|
- Studio: Curbstone Press
|
- Title: Watercolor Women / Opaque Men: A Novel in Verse
|
Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: Watercolor Women / Opaque Men is a wild and raucous narrative of a single, working mother, the daughter of Chicano migrant workers, and her struggles for upward mobility. With a remarkable combination of tenderness, wicked humor, and biting satire, the main character, Ella-or "She"-moves toward establishing her sexual identity (she has affairs with both men and women) and finding her rightful place in the world while simultaneously raising her son to be independent and self-sufficient. Reminiscent of the picaresque novel, Watercolor Women / Opaque Men contains episodes that range from the Mexican Revolution to modern-day Chicago and reflects a deep pride in Chicano culture and the hardships immigrants had to endure: "In my familia we don't / pretend. / We're not / Mixed blood. There are no buried / Spanish titles beneath /anyone's tombstone." Nor does Castillo tolerate the pretensions of others. Pomposity, arrogance, and narrow-mindedness are the targets of her satiric pen. In a strong rhythmic and colloquial voice, Castillo explores these issues of love, sexual orientation, and cultural identity, taking to heart the words of Mam Grande: "You will always be your most reliable resource." Ana Castillo is indisputably one of the most important Chicana authors writing today. She has written 17 books, the most noted being Peel My Love like an Onion and So Far from God. Born in Chicago of working-class parents, she went on to earn a PhD in American studies at the University of Chicago. Both as a journalist and literary author, she has been a major force in the struggle for economic justice, women's rights, and civil liberties. She has also won numerous awards, including the American Book Award, the Carl Sandburg Award, and the Mountains & Plains Booksellers Award. At present, she lives in Anthony, New Mexico.
|
Customer Reviews
verse novel of the hardscrabble life of a Hispanic woman
The narrator is a poverty-stricken Hispanic woman named Ella who early in the tale becomes pregnant while having sex "on a lumpy sack of garlic heads." Although her fortunes do not improve much from such a fateful, inauspicious moment, she manages to struggle along. Her tale in the form of a long poem broken into chapters describes her varied situations and relationship. The voice is by turns regretful, optimistic, determined, wary, amused, political, introspective. As expected in a poem even though meant as something of a story, description, dialog, and setting of scenes is weak. And characterization too is faint except for the central character of Ella giving the narration. But this is enough for lively snapshots of a Hispanic woman surviving at the margins.
|
gorgeous and forceful
I inhaled WATERCOLOR WOMEN OPAQUE MEN all in one night; it was gorgeous and forceful. I loved the two journeys that bracketed Ella's adult life: the run to Chicago with Tia Renata and the astonishing first-class flight out of the frame of the book at the end. I loved too the braid of hair that reappeared toward the end, the line, "You will always be your most reliable resource." And Ella's secret paintings! Brava to Castillo. I've been her fan since I read THE MIXQUIAHUALA LETTERS in college, and while I still long for a novel that envelops me as much as SO FAR FROM GOD did, it was a pleasure to read this new one.
|
Once more, from the heart
I am not a Chicana but I appreciate Ana Castillo's new novel as an accurate reflection of the way of thinking of Latina women caught in dead-end blue-collar jobs and unequal personal relationships, whether with men or other women. "Ella" reminds me of many of my ESL students who clean homes and offices and diaper babies for a living. Ella's observations can be painful to hear, especially for anyone coming from a more privileged position. Others, including many righteous Latinas, might object to the less than traditional morality of this character. They would prefer her to be 100% virtuous and beyond reproach, but Ana Castillo is a bigger writer than that. The fact that none of the characters in this poem/novel is heroic is the best indicator that they are not stereotypes. Instead, we are invited for too brief a time into the mindset of one woman whose personality emerges through a series of vignettes, like a watercolor painting. And, if we are honest, we may find a little of ourselves in some of these vignettes too. Gracias, Ana.
|
Stereotype after Stereotype
Readers who have been waiting for Castillo's new book will be sadly disappointed. This book is poorly written and without a point. This is an endless barrage of stereotypes. I'm a Chicana and I don't know why I'm supposed to believe any of this. It reads like a bad telenovela. Castillo made absolutely no effort to make the characters sympathetic: the reader has no reason to admire or love any character in this book. After reading so much about the lives and experiences of these characters (especially the supposedly Latina Everywoman, Ella), I still finished the book not caring one bit about whether any of them continued to live or die, succeed or fail. This is hardly a recommendation and couching the book as a "novel in verse" does little to mask its flaws.
|
A new genius novel by Ana Castillo
In a transnational authentic Chicana voice, Ana Castillo portrays the different trajectories of the life of a 'watercolor woman'. The various colors that make up the portrait of this woman move smoothly between her agony of her uninhabited heart, the potentiality of her motherhood, and the freedom of a loving spirit. In this sense, Castillo goes beyond the dilemma of women of color invisibility in the U.S to address other women's oppression and aspirations in different parts of the world. It is a masterpiece work of art that compels one to investigate one's life within and without.
|
|
|
|
|