Product Details
What is Secret: Short Stories by Chilean Women

What is Secret: Short Stories by Chilean Women
From White Pine Press

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Product Description

The only work of its kind in English or Spanish


Product Details

  • Published on: 1995-11-01
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .91" h x 5.66" w x 8.51" l, 1.00 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
I admit that I'm partial to Latin American fiction because of its element of surprise, the hidden subtleties that grace its magical narratives. It's like catching a glimpse of a bird of paradise. Published by White Pine Press, this anthology is the first collection of its kind and includes fabulous stories written by Chilean women from 1920 to the present. From angels to hopeful mortals, from dreams to the limits of the bone house that is our body, these stories speak visions that have been silenced as subversive or "merely domestic."

From Publishers Weekly
"Is, in fact, writing a subversive impulse for women, as opposed to what men rather vaingloriously define as craftsmanship?" This question is posed by the narrator of a Lucia Guerra story addressing an Argentine writer, but it reverberates throughout this outstanding collection. To compile what is touted as the first-ever collection of Chilean women's writing, Agosin searched "the great books of literary history" but, she says, "the panorama was desolate, so I perused marginal journals and old fashion magazines. It was there...that I heard the voices of these long-lost women." Given the number of translators, there is an incredible smoothness of tone here. And, perhaps reflecting their sources, female concerns are central. Ana Vasquez's secretary gets invited to an artsy gathering and worries over what to wear and how to act. In a wonderful run-on monologue, Marta Blanco's newly pregnant woman runs the gamut of emotions. Agata Gligo's mother must explain to the police how, although she only has two children, seven bicycles have been stolen from them. Given Agosin's emphasis on each story's reflection of "the woman who wrote it and of her historical situation." it is really too bad that the stories aren't dated. Still, this is an important work and it is also a great read.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"Is, in fact, writing a subversive impulse for women, as opposed to what men rather vain gloriously define as craftsmanship? This question... reverberates throughout this outstanding collection... Given the number of translators, there is an incredible smoothness of tone here... this is an important work and it is also a great read." -- Publishers Weekly.