We, the Casertas
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- $249.00
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- $249.00
Descripción editorial
From prize–winning author Aurora Venturini, a Gothic masterpiece following a gifted Argentine girl who left for Europe in search of meaning, and the relentless punishments of womanhood in the 1940s
In deliciously ironic, and at times breathtakingly poetic prose, We, the Casertas is the story of Chela, the first-born child to a wealthy family in Buenos Aires. Threatened by her extraordinary intellect, her parents immediately take against her, instead lavishing attention on her beautiful sister. Chela is soon exiled to the attic and allowed to run wild, her only friend a lame owl with whom she explores the countryside.
Chela’s intellectual curiosity grows and she becomes a brilliant student, excelling at subject after subject, and eventually breaking free of the family that has always misunderstood her. But her troubles don’t end there. After falling in love with a married man more than twice her age, she has her heart broken when he refuses to divorce his wife. In her hurt, she flees to Chile where she befriends Pablo Neruda, before heading to Europe where she falls in with a trio of mysterious aristocratic intellectuals dabbling in black magic. After her estate is appropriated by the Peronist government, Chela goes in search of her great aunt in Sicily where she embarks upon a passionate affair, goes treasure hunting with local sailors, and discovers an old family relic.
We, the Casertas is a wild, unpredictable novel about the horrors of family life and the desperate loneliness of womanhood in the mid-century.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This mesmerizing 1992 novel from Venturini (Cousins), who died in 2015, traces a brilliant and unruly woman's childhood isolation, youthful adventures, and devastating heartbreak. At four years old, Chela Stradolini is regularly sent by her pregnant mother to the attic of their Buenos Aires home, where she spends much of her time when she's not roaming the property with her only friend, an owl. After her brother is born with dwarfism, he joins her in the attic and she takes care of him. By the time she's 20, everyone in her immediate family has died, and she begins an affair with the much older Luis, with whom she falls deeply in love. She's devastated when he refuses to get a divorce and commit to her, prompting her to travel, first to Chile, where she writes literary criticism and meets Pablo Neruda. She impresses the celebrated poet with a piece on his work but stops herself from falling for him, having "inoculated against love." In Italy, she's taken in by her great-aunt, who becomes her lover before her macabre return to the attic in Argentina. Full of unexpected turns and darkly haunting imagery, this gothic tale is worthy of its resurrection.