Forbidden Fruit and Other Stories

$11.95

by Pablo La Rosa

ISBN: 978-1-55885-097-2
Publication Date: November 30, 1996
Bind: Trade Paperback
Pages: 141

 

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In masterful tales of coming of age and becoming marginalized during the Cuban Revolution and its aftermath, Pablo La Rosa nostalgically looks back at a childhood spent by the seaside and creates a mosaic of poignant experiences seen through the glaring lens of race and exile. Neither the advantages of race or education, however, can exempt the disoriented protagonist from their perceived loss of homeland, integrity, identity.

In the masterful “El Marielito,” La Rosa captures the bewilderment of a black man, marginalized by his race and circumstances in pre and post revolutionary Cuba and during his exile in the United   States. Equally on the margin in spite of the advantages of education and race, a Cuban college student can relate only to a Russian janitor; though they share no common language they wordlessly share a longing for their lost homelands.

La Rosa exhibits a penchant for the whimsical and experimental in homage to Latin American masters Jose Donoso, Carlos Fuentes, and Julio Cortázar. His stylistic journey takes us from the magically real to psychological suspense and adventure. La Rosa’s masterful pen captivates our imagination and projects the reader into the souls of his characters.

 

“The best of these studies of various forms of alienation and exile display a bracing vitality.”–Kirkus Reviews

PABLO LA ROSA is a poet and short story writer whose works have been published in numerous journals. He is the recipient of various awards for his work, including the Cintas Fellowship; he was named a finalist in the Letras de Oro Award for a collection of short stories, a finalist in the Kansas Quarterly Fiction Awards and he received an Honorable Mention in the New Letters Literary Awards and the Seaton Poetry Awards. A professor at Baker University, La Rosa lives in Mission, Kansas with his wife and three children.