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The Volcano Daughters

A Novel

ebook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available
A MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK • A searingly original debut about two sisters and their flight from genocide—which takes them from Hollywood to Paris to San Francisco’s Cannery Row—each haunted along the way by the ghosts of their murdered friends, who are not yet done telling their stories
“Gripping and spellbinding...Unforgettable.”—Brit Bennett, author of The Vanishing Half • “Stunning...A sweeping yet intimate look at love, sisterhood, and resistance in the face of devastation.”Charmaine Wilkerson, author of Black Cake “A bilingual, mythological, and original debut about resistance and survival.” —Vulture

El Salvador, 1923. Graciela, a young girl growing up on a volcano in a community of Indigenous women, is summoned to the capital, where she is claimed as an oracle for a rising dictator. There she meets Consuelo, the sister she has never known, who was stolen from their home before Graciela was born. The two spend years under the cruel El Gran Pendejo’s regime, unwillingly helping his reign of terror, until genocide strikes the community from which they hail. Each believing the other to be dead, they escape, fleeing across the globe, reinventing themselves until fate ultimately brings them back together in the most unlikely of ways…
Endlessly surprising, vividly imaginative, bursting with lush life, The Volcano Daughters charts a new history and mythology of El Salvador, fiercely bringing forth voices that have been calling out for generations.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 24, 2024
      Balibrera’s wrenching debut follows sisters Consuelo and Graciela after they’re displaced by a massacre in El Salvador. As little girls in 1914, they’re raised by their Indigenous mother, Socorrito, who labors on a coffee finca and was pursued by the girls’ biological father, Germán, the second most powerful man on the finca, because of her light skin. When Consuelo is four, Germán takes her from Socorrito and brings her home to his wife, Perlita, who is barren. After Germán dies in 1923, Perlita steals the younger Graciela and gives Consuelo to the country’s dictator, a former general known by his many detractors as El Gran Pendejo, as part of a complex plot to curry favor with him. In the 1930s, when El Gran Pendejo launches a genocidal campaign against the young women’s Indigenous community, they both flee the country. Consuelo, an aspiring artist, pursues her career in San Francisco and France, while Graciela, an actor, stars in degrading Spanish-language films in Hollywood. With keen psychological insight, Balibrera portrays how the women, each of whom doesn’t know the other has survived, make hard choices in search of fulfillment. It adds up to a powerful story of finding the strength to chart one’s own course.

    • Booklist

      June 20, 2024
      Balibrera's lush historical novel, her first, is narrated by the ghosts of four young Indigenous women who lived near a volcano and were victims of the real-life 1932 El Salvadoran ethnocide called La Matanza. They recount the lives of their childhood friends Graciela and Consuela, daughters of a tenant farmer who becomes a trusted adviser of a ruthless general (inspired by Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez). When the father mysteriously dies, the general installs the younger daughter Graciela (a mere child) as an oracle to advise him on governmental matters. She and Consuela are forced to live in the palace, apart from their anguished mother. After the massacre, they eventually escape, Consuela to San Francisco and Paris, where she mingles with artists and elites; and Graciela to Los Angeles, where she is a struggling actress working in a factory. Alas, the narrative flow suffers from a lack of context for non-Spanish speakers and rambling story lines that minimize significant events in El Salvadoran history. Still, the young narrators provide irreverent commentary alongside dramatic storytelling depicting the hardscrabble lives of determined sisters yearning for better lives.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2024

      Balibrera debuts with a novel spanning the 1920s-40s that follows two sisters who live in El Salvador under the rule of a brutal dictator and flee the genocide of the country's Indigenous people. They are followed by the ghosts of their murdered friends as they travel the globe from Hollywood to Paris and reinvent their lives. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      July 15, 2024
      A captivating rendition of early-20th-century El Salvador. Graciela and her four closest friends grow up on a coffee plantation nestled on a volcano, surrounded by the "joyful ferocity" of their mothers' love. Their lives on the estate are simple but vibrant. They think little of men, including their fathers, until a man from the capital comes looking for Graciela. Her absent father was the second-in-command and spiritual adviser to the ambitious general referred to as El Gran Pendejo, and he has died. She is summoned to the capital to pay her respects and there meets her long-lost sister, Consuelo, who was kidnapped from their village by her father as a gift for his barren wife. Both now trapped under the thumb of the general, the two reluctantly grow close until El Gran Pendejo, who has bloated into a full-fledged dictator, unleashes unspeakable terror on the nation's Indigenous population. The inhabitants of their home village are massacred, including Graciela's childhood friends, who narrate this tale from beyond the grave. In prose that, while supple, does not stray from the harshness of history, the voices of these four murdered girls unite in a ghostly chorus to project the story of their friend and her sister, survivors of genocide. Their visions of Graciela and Consuelo are riveting; the two women, both striking characters, build physically separate but spiritually linked lives in California and Paris in the 1930s. Balibrera eulogizes the lives lost in La Matanza, the real-life 1932 massacre of the Pipil people by the Salvadoran government, and underscores the value of holding one's culture close, even when it threatens to disrupt just-scarring wounds. Despite the singular narratives sanctioned by those in power, "every myth, every story, has at least two versions," and "if you don't tell it properly, if you say it too quietly, you erase everyone's face as you go." The resilience of sisterly bonds forms the backbone of this swirling, heart-wrenching debut.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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