Tell It to Me Singing
A Novel
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
An “utterly unforgettable” (Kevin Wilson, New York Times bestselling author of Nothing to See Here) debut novel about a Cuban American family sent into a tailspin when the ailing matriarch confesses the first of several shocking secrets to her daughter.
Mónica Campo is pregnant with her first child when, moments before being wheeled into emergency heart surgery, her mother confesses a long-held secret: Mónica’s father is not the man who raised her. But when her mother wakes up and begins having delusional episodes, Mónica doesn’t know what to believe—whether the confession was real or just a channeling of the telenovela her mother watches nightly.
In her despair, Mónica wants to speak with only one person: her ex-boyfriend of five years, Manny. She can’t help but worry, though, what this says about her relationship with her fiancé and father of her unborn child.
Mónica’s search for the truth leads her to a new understanding of the past—the early ’80s, when her parents arrived from Cuba on the famous Mariel boatlift, and the tumultuous ’70s, a decade after Castro’s takeover, when some people were still secretly fighting his regime—people like her mother and the man she claims is Mónica’s real father.
Tell It to Me Singing is “so fantastic and funny, so full of life, and so full of genuine heart that, like your favorite binge-worthy show, you'll have trouble pulling yourself away” (Cristina Henríquez, author of The Great Divide). This “rich portrait” (Kirkus Reviews) of a family takes readers from Miami to Cuba to the jungles of Costa Rica and, along the way, explores the question of how and to whom we belong, how a life is built, and how we know we’re home.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
In her delectable debut novel, Tita Ramirez turns up the soapy suds on a Cuban American family drama. Monica is flabbergasted when her mother, who’s about to have heart surgery, suddenly confesses that Monica’s father might not be biologically related to her. Unsure of what’s real and what’s seeping into her mom’s memories from telenovela plotlines, the very pregnant Monica is stuck trying to piece together the truth about her family history. Ramirez ingeniously plays with soap opera elements throughout this clever read, including secrets that stretch back decades to counterrevolutionaries in Cuba. And did we mention that Monica is pregnant with one man’s child but possibly still in love with another? Besides the forays into the past, Rodriguez adds an action-packed side trip to Costa Rica that would make any telenovela scribe proud. Once we started reading Tell It to Me Singing, we couldn’t put it down.