Sirena Selena
A Novel
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4.1 • 9 Ratings
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Sirena Selena is a lyrical and provocative tale of identity, desire, and the transformative power of music. From the author of Urban Oracles, Mayra Santos-Febres's Sirena Selena chronicles the journey of a fifteen-year-old hustler discovered by Martha Divine in the backstreets of San Juan. Drugged out of his mind and singing boleros that transfix the listener, the young man is transformed into Sirena Selena, a diva whose uncanny beauty and irresistible voice become their ticket to fame and fortune.
Auditioning for a luxury hotel in the Dominican Republic, Selena casts her spell over Hugo Graubel, a powerful and married investor. Determined to escape the poverty and abuse s/he suffered as a child, Selena engages Graubel in a long seduction in this mordant, intensely lyrical tragi-comedy. Part masque, part cabaret, Sirena Selena explores themes of class, race, gender, and the hunger and desire to be something more.
A mesmerizing blend of "The Blue Angel" and "Kiss of the Spider Woman," Sirena Selena is a captivating work of contemporary Caribbean literature that delves into the complexities of identity against a backdrop of colonialism. Santos-Febres's prose is as seductive as Selena's boleros, making this a must-read for fans of literary fiction with LGBTQ+ characters.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this titillating debut novel, a follow-up to her well-received short fiction collection, Urban Oracles, Santos-Febres evokes the sometimes dreamy, always seamy world of Caribbean drag queens, hustlers, transsexuals and two remarkable divas. Strung out and singing his dead abuela's boleros, a 15-year-old street urchin/hustler named Leocadio rummages through the garbage in a shabby San Juan alley looking for food. His crystalline singing voice is "as old and as fresh as the perennial pain of love" and his beautiful face and honey-colored mane enchant Martha Divine, a respected, worldly transsexual and owner of the Blue Danube, a seedy but chic drag club. A consummate businesswoman, Martha immediately sees Leocadio's star potential, plucks the androgynous teen off the streets, helps him kick the cocaine habit that's ravaging his nasal passages ("that's not where a young lady is supposed to have her first period"), and transforms Leocadio into Sirena Selena, a spellbinding bolero-singing diva. After successful shows in Puerto Rico, Martha decides it's time for Sirena to take on the Dominican Republic. While auditioning at a posh Santo Domingo hotel, Sirena is bidden to entertain Hugo Graubel III, a rich businessman who recognizes her as "the woman of his dreams." Sirena ditches Martha to stay with Hugo (who nonchalantly sends his wife packing) and performs, with smashing success, at the dinner party Hugo gives for the Dominican elite. Meanwhile, enterprising Martha finds another gig providing live entertainment at an upscale, underground gay club. Flashbacks throughout this lushly lyrical novel reveal decades in the lives of Martha and Sirena, while an array of vibrant narrators animate the plot twists. Deep purple prose strikes just the right campy, melancholy note as Santos-Febres illuminates the essence of these unforgettable, fiery femmes with moving pathos.