In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: August 1995
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 3,853
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    Reader Rating: (78 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Dramatic" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 1995
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Paperback, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 3,853
    • Lexile: 910L 

    Synopsis

    An ALA Notable Book. Julia Alvarez's eagerly awaited second novel is a powerful story of courage, innocence, and political martyrdom in the Hispanic Caribbean. Based on actual events--the death of three sisters on November 25, 1960--the novel immerses us in an epoch in the life of the Dominican Republic. The "Butterflies," as they were known, lived daringly and dangerously under a regime that imprisoned, tortured, and killed with impunity. "Brimming with warmth and vitality . . . Mesmerizing."--Kirkus Reviews, starred; "Potent and luminous."--Philadelphia Inquirer. A BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB and QUALITY PAPERBACK BOOK CLUB SELECTION.

    Annotation

    Set during the waning days of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republica in 1960, this extraordinary novel tells the story the Mirabal sisters, three young wives and mothers who are assassinated after visiting their jailed husbands.

    Publishers Weekly

    During the last days of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic, three young women, members of a conservative, pious Catholic family, who had become committed to the revolutionary overthrow of the regime, were ambushed and assassinated as they drove back from visiting their jailed husbands. Thus martyred, the Mirabal sisters have become mythical figures in their country, where they are known as las mariposas (the butterflies), from their underground code names. Herself a native of the Dominican Republic, Alvarez ( How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents ) has fictionalized their story in a narrative that starts slowly but builds to a gripping intensity. Each of the girls--Patria, Minerva and Maria Terese (Mate) Mirabal--speaks in her own voice, beginning in their girlhood in the 1940s; their surviving sister, Dede, frames the narrative with her own tale of suffering and dedication to their memory. To differentiate their personalities and the ways they came to acquire revolutionary fervor, Alvarez takes the risk of describing their early lives in leisurely detail, somewhat slowing the narrative momentum. In particular, the giddy, childish diary entries of Mate, the youngest, may seem irritatingly mundane at first, but in time Mate's heroism becomes the most moving of all, as the sisters endure the arrests of their husbands, their own imprisonment and the inexorable progress of Trujillo's revenge. Alvarez captures the terrorized atmosphere of a police state, in which people live under the sword of terrible fear and atrocities cannot be acknowledged. As the sisters' energetic fervor turns to anguish, Alvarez conveys their courage and their desperation, and the full import of their tragedy. 40,000 first printing; $40,000 ad/promo; reprint rights to NAL; 20-city author tour. (Sept.)

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    Biography

    With her vivid tales of growing up between the two disparate cultures of the Dominican Republic and the United States, Julia Alvarez has drawn comparisons to writers ranging from Jane Austen to Gabriel García Márquez. However, its is Alvarez's fresh, vivid voice that sets her apart, and speaks to fans from both cultures.

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    Customer Reviews

    Oh! I sobbed like a baby and liked it!by Zipperhips

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    October 02, 2009: It's emotional in the best way. You'll cry, don't feel abashed about it. It's sad stuff, but it's a story about a place and a series of atrocities that don't get as much press as some other horrific events in history, and so the tragedy doesn't loom in your mind so much from the get-go (though it's by no means a surprise what happens to the sisters). The result is a novel that's "all the best of dark and bright," --the warmth, vivacity, and exquisite atmosphere of the beginning intensifies the drama and the pain of the end tremendously, without weighing down the momentum or bumming out the tone.

    Couldn't put it down!!by Anonymous

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    August 21, 2009: I loved this book. It was difficult to begin reading because of it's structure, but once I became used to it, I could not stop reading. Knowledge of the Spanish language is helpful but not necessary. After finishing, I gave the book to my sister and mother, who is from the Dominican Republic. Enjoy!


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