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3.74 AVERAGE

adventurous emotional reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated
informative slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot

This was a really disappointing read for me! I’ve really enjoyed Isabel Allende’s books in the past, and I was excited to see this come out. I thought the history was quite interesting but most everything else fell flat for me. I didn’t really care for Emelia— I liked the idea of who she was and the concept of her journey, but when we got to the end and
she was in jail and beaten and almost killed I wasn’t moved at all??? I said oh? Hm! Eric and their love story felt so out of place and unnecessary.
I did enjoy some of the side characters, including Angelita and Rufina, but I didn’t really care about most of them!! 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
adventurous challenging emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
adventurous emotional inspiring reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Loveable characters: Complicated
clair_regan's profile picture

clair_regan's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 53%

DNF at 53%

Not me DNF'ing a second book this month...

I tried. Oh, how I tried. This is a SHORT book and it was like pulling teeth trying to read. I was so excited for this book, and I had 0 motivation to read it once I started.

Again, I didn't finish, so I can't give a full review, but the writing style is what really did it for me. It was somehow too long winded and too abrupt at the same time. This is memoir style book, but the main character felt disconnected from the story to me (like she was just along for the ride while things happened to and around her). Parts of the story that needed more details had none, and unimportant details would go on for pages.

Maybe I'll revisit this at some point, and no hate to the author, this was just not the read for me.
adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful informative inspiring mysterious reflective sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
adventurous emotional hopeful reflective
Loveable characters: Yes
adventurous informative reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

Thanks to the publishers at Ballentine for a chance to read Isabel Allende’s newest novel, My Name Is Emilia Del Valle. 

Emilia, a young woman from San Francisco, wants to make her way in the world and finds writing to be an outlet for her thoughts. She wrangles herself a position as a columnist for the local newspaper, and becomes a wartime correspondent for the Civil War taking place in Chile 1891. 

What follows is a typical story of an ingenue who learns that newsflash - war is hell. While I appreciate the numerous times the novel makes reference to Emilia’s whiteness (as the child of an Irish-American and one of the elites of Chilean high society), it’s a little painful to muddle through it with her. 

Emilia is constantly running towards danger, both as a way to get the deeper scoop but also as a kind of rebellion on the limiting gender roles placed on a woman of her time. But once you add Emilia’s whiteness - even if she is part Chilean - the novel reads more like Eat Pray Love but instead of food or spirituality, war is the impetus for our protagonist’s growth. 

This isn’t to discount Emilia’s fair share of pain and trauma that she experiences throughout the novel, but it highlights a key inconsistency in the book. The book goes to lengths to describe how tragic it is that these people (soldiers, canteen girls, poor folks, and more) are the story. They are history in action, and yet so many of their names are lost to time. And yet, this random white woman from the US gets the privilege of being able to survive and tell her story, and the book doesn’t really critique her or ever really ask her to contend with the fact that even limiting the perspective to just her and her fiance (you guessed it: also white as the snow) is still a kind of erasure of the oppressed. 

We only get Emilia’s story because her whiteness and tenuous connection to wealth manage to shield her from the worst of violence consuming Chile. Also Emilia’s decision at the end of the book lands flat for me given that she is a whole colonizer who even acknowledges that land is not hers, ditches her worried family to… commune with rocks? She narrowly escapes death, and processes her trauma… on land her ancestors stole. And the local tribe is just happy to take care of her in her convalescence?? 

This is not just saying that I want Isabel Allende to write a story that is not hers or take a perspective that’s not hers. I’m just tired of white protagonists stepping over every other character of color in the name of feminism without a more intentional critique, as well as white latines and our complicity with these colonial patterns. Allende’s last novel El viento conoce mi nombre did a much better job of examining race alongside gender politics in a Latin American context, while also pushing white protagonists to do something beyond guilt or pity. 

Isabel Allende is a better writer than this, and this novel could have been so much more. Hoping that her next one (because there will be a next one) hits the mark better.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No