000 | 01856nam a2200181 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
010 | _a2005056137 | ||
020 | _a9781579621247 | ||
024 | _a62152952 | ||
050 | _aCT598.H55 | ||
082 | _a920.7208997 | ||
100 | 1 | _aEllen Urbani Hiltebrand | |
245 | 1 | _aWhen I Was Elena | |
260 | _bPermanent Press | ||
300 | _a304 pages | ||
520 | _aWhen I Was Elena is an extraordinary account of a young American woman's sojourn in the guerrilla-infested mountains of Guatemala. Shattering the concept of a typical memoir, the author's personal story is interlaced, chapter-for-chapter, with tales told from the perspectives of seven indigenous women she encountered during her journey. At once a coming-of-age adventure and a haunting history of the struggle to overcome oppression - both personal and cultural - this genre-breaching work heralds the arrival of a daring new talent in American literature.At age 22, Ellen Urbani left behind a classic Middle America upbringing, moving from a Southern sorority house into a scorpion-infested mud hut in order to live, work, and immerse herself in the culture of Guatemala's poorest villagers. There she encountered seven local women - among them the wife of a political martyr, a twelve-year-old incest victim, and an escapee from house arrest - whose experiences unexpectedly illuminated her own. Told with unflinching honesty, disarming humor, and an astonishing ear for dialect, this is a work of such atmospheric accuracy that the scent of fire-roasted tortillas virtually wafts from the pages as this tiny country - and the women who occupy it - bursts to life.A paean to friendship and the resilience it lends to the human spirit, When I Was Elena joins a host of disparate voices into a composite of masterful storytelling. It echoes as a work of singular achievement. | ||
650 | _aMemoir | ||
999 |
_c7764 _d7764 |