Dreaming In Cuban Summary

Words: 800
Pages: 4

Cristina Garcia is an influential Cuban-American writer born in 1958. Her work remarkably discusses the struggles of fellow Cuban-Americans who are stuck in the battle of identity and belonging between Cuba and the United States. Garcia is the author of several successful texts including King of Cuba, The lady Matador’s Hotel, The Aguero sisters and Dreaming in Cuban. In her book Dreaming in Cuban, she tells the story of three generations of women during the years of the Cuban Revolution, and the impact it has on each of their lives. All suffer loss and displacement caused by the political division, a product of the revolution. Because of the revolution and the separation it brings about, the first and second generation of women embark on a …show more content…
She has never thought of Cuba as a home and desires to purge the memories of abuse that lingers in her mind. Unlike her mother, she detests the communist revolution therefore she chooses another path of self-reinvention. Having moved to the United States she embarks on a journey to disintegrate all Cuban ties from her daughter Pilar and her husband Rufino Puente. While in Brooklyn, Lourdes continuously seeks for ways to find peace. Her restlessness worsens when her father falls ill of cancer, she ventures to fill this hole by binge eating on baked food and sex. Garcia states “Lourdes was reaching through Rufino for something he could not give her, she wasn’t sure what” (21). After losing her father Jorge to the cold hands of death, Lourdes resolves to further her father’s mission of promoting capitalism. Her dead father occasionally visits her to remind to “stop the cancer” at the door before it spreads. She claims to have always “felt a spiritual link to American moguls” therefore she “ordered custom-made sign for her bakeries in red, white and blue…each store would bear her name, her Legacy: LOURDES PUENTE, PROPRIETOR” (170-171). Lourdes’ idée fixe propels her to continuously fight communism at all