Tomorrow They Will Kiss by Eduardo Santiago

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: July 2006
  • 304pp
  • Sales Rank: 358,197
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: July 2006
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Paperback, 304pp
    • Sales Rank: 358,197

    Synopsis

    Written with buoyant humor and a sharp sense of human desire, this is the story of love pursued at any cost, of how friendship and history unite people for better or worse, and of the hope for that redemptive kiss capable of reconciling estranged lovers and countries.

    Publishers Weekly

    Scandal catches up to the Cuban emigre community in America circa 1967 in this fresh, relevant first novel by TV writer Santiago. The story switches point of view among three women who grew up in Palamagria, Cuba, and now ride to work together every day at a Union City, N.J., toy factory. Single mother Graciela is a kind, insecure romantic hoping more than anything for the same true love that redeems the beleaguered women on the nightly telenovelas. Caridad, a vain gossip, and Imperio, bossy and sharp-tongued, share a lifelong indignation ("Imaginate!") over Graciela's nerve: in Cuba, marrying above her station and cheating on her desirable husband and in America learning English and catching the eye of the factory foreman, Mr. O'Reilly. So it's with barely contained envy-and a comical penchant for over-justifying their bitterness-that the two try to interfere in Graciela's attempts to better herself in America. Though the two antagonists can grate-their vitriol against Graciela is constant-the detailed immigrant community is vital and entertaining. (July) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Customer Reviews

    You will love Eduardo Santiago's TOMORROW THEY WILL KISS!by Anonymous

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    June 16, 2007: EDUARDO SANTIAGO, in my opinion, eventually will win the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished fiction by an American author, and he may be the next writer of Cuban descent to do so. Graciela, Caridad, and Imperio--Cuban women in exile--work in a doll factory in New Jersey. Santiago segues back to Cuba throughout the novel, so we can see the life they left during the Cuban Revolution and understand what they?re up against in the U.S. Graciela deals with her frustrations just like American women do--by losing herself in TV soap operas. Graciela's coping skills, in Cuba, were superb. When she decided to marry the scholarly and recently widowed Ernesto de la Cruz, she wasted no time: 'It's sort of like a shotgun wedding,' Imperio said, 'except in this case it's the bride who is holding the shotgun.' Then we learn that: Ernesto didn't make a lot of money, and Graciela wanted things. But things were scarce and the black market was expensive. So she set herself up as a manicurist and was very successful at it, because she rendered the best Cuban half-moons in town. The Cuban half-moon was a pearly- colored crescent painted with precision exactly where the nail met the cuticle. Graciela was masterful at it, an artist. When she did our nails it looked as if all our fingers were smiling. But few were smiling inside Castro's Cuba. Imperio tells us: There were those who were desperate to leave the country, those who hated the people who were leaving the country, and the rest of us, who were caught in the middle. People like me were frozen with fear and indecision. We were not the sort of people who dreamed of a life in other parts of the country, let alone the world. We were born in Palmagria and, in spite of its problems and defects, we expected to die there, be buried there, and spend the rest of eternity there. That's the way it had always been. Occasionally someone ventured out, driven by some strange desire that no one could understand. But for the most part, we stayed. It was easier for the wealthy to get out, they had always kept one foot in Cuba and another abroad. . . . For the very poor, there was no decision to be made at all. Very few had the education or even the mentality to consider going to another country and learning another language. They could could barely get along where they were born. Besides, the new administration was all about them. There were slogans on walls now offering them a brighter future. . . . You couldn't leave the house without running into some sort of demonstration. Banners and flags appeared everywhere. Uniformed men and women became so common that after a while we hardly took notice of them. They walked around rigidly, their faces set hard with responsibility. They always saluted us as we walked by. They demanded respect. They were not friendly people, these rebel soldiers. They didn't smile, they didn't dance it was as if, suddenly, they had stopped being Cubans. As if something hard and harsh had invaded their souls. Tomorrow They Will Kiss is a great read, and I can almost guarantee you will love it. In this...

    REALLY GREAT READ..by Anonymous

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    January 17, 2007: Juicy. Spicy. Sweet. Dramatic. I highly recommend it.


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