Solitaria
A Novel
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
"Solitaria is a gem.” —Saidiya Hartman, author of Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments
For fans of Fernanda Melchor and Tove Ditlevsen, a raw, propulsive novel by an award-winning Afro-Brazillian novelist about a Black mother and daughter who work as live-in maids for a rich family in an unnamed Brazilian city, and the tragedy to which they unwittingly bear witness.
Mabel has been staying in the Golden Plate—the most expensive building on the block, in an unnamed city in Brazil—for almost her entire life. Yet her presence there is merely tolerated: she inhabits a miniscule room with her mother, Eunice, who alongside Mabel provides round-the-clock attention and care for the wealthy family who lives there. As Mabel grows up, her dissatisfaction with the forced smallness of her life becomes difficult to bear, and she is driven to work toward new possibilities for herself.
Eunice does the best that she can—uneducated, and with a daughter and ailing mother both depending solely on her, her life is a series of limitations. She moves through the rooms of the penthouse suite in silent servitude, and though Mabel is ashamed of this invisibility act they've both perfected, the era of slavery is still fresh in the country's consciousness, and Eunice thinks it best not to dwell too hard on such things. But when tragedy strikes, and a little boy dies, Eunice must decide if she can face the indifference and injustices of the ruling class she has spent so long orbiting.
Told through direct, agile and evocative prose, Solitaria is a liberation novel of the most rousing order. Through the book's awareness of space and whose presence is permissible, the world of the Golden Plate unfurls, and an unflinching portrait emerges of modern-day Brazil, its legacies of colonial violence haunting rooms across the country, both big and small.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Afro-Brazilian novelist Cruz makes her English-language debut with a taut and deeply felt tale of class tension. It's told in three parts, beginning with Mabel Pereira da Silva, 13, who works with her mother, Eunice, as a live-in maid for Ms. Lúcia's family in a luxury high-rise. On one of Mabel's first days there, Ms. Lúcia's toddler nephew nearly drowns in the pool and the blame falls on an underage nanny employed by the child's mother. The incident plants the seeds of discontent in Mabel: at the ways the rich in her unnamed Brazilian city are allowed to be careless, perpetual children while the poor are denied any childhood at all. But when a teenage pregnancy threatens Mabel's dreams of medical school, it's Lúcia who helps her get an abortion. In the novel's second part, Eunice struggles to keep her family together. Thanks to Mabel's influence, she chooses dignity and leaves Lúcia and her alcoholic husband to make a better life for herself. However, when Mabel needs money for textbooks and Lúcia offers her a substantial sum for one day of work, she accepts, only to witness yet another tragedy born of carelessness. As the truth comes out, the novel builds to a fiery anthem against injustice. This bildungsroman has plenty of bite.