A Girl Like Che Guevara: A Novel

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Soho Press, 2004 - Fiction - 305 pages
“Amusing, observant. . . . Doval’s sense of place and devastating depiction of prejudice in 1980s Cuba make this a worthwhile debut.”-The Miami Herald

“[A] piquant coming-of-age novel.”-Omagazine

“Absolutely remarkable . . . explodes with brilliance.” -Carlos Eire, National Book Award-winning author ofWaiting for Snow in Havana

“A rich and perceptive portrayal of daily life in Cuba.” -Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel

Sixteen-year-old Lourdes is a dedicated and proud revolutionary who spends the summer of 1982, along with her peers, at the “School-in-the-Fields,” tilling tobacco fields to prove her dedication to Fidel and the revolution.

But she is also a study of contradictions. Lourdes outwardly scoffs at the old ways but wears anazabacheamulet under her clothing, next to her Che medallion, to ward off evil spirits. She secretly prays to theorisha Yemayáwhile she pledges her fealty to Fidel and the secular socialist ideals of her father, a professor of scientific Communism at the University of Havana. She develops a crush on her roommate at the camp, but, like many other things in the socialist regime under which she lives, same-sex relationships are forbidden. Like other girls her age, she longs to wear smuggled Jordache jeans and drink Cuban coffee, to watch American cartoons and eat steak whenever she wants. All simple pleasures, all denied her by the same revolution she serves. What she has are the harsh realities of life in a glorified work camp, which lead her to question her allegiances. Whydoesshe want to be like Che?

Teresa de la Caridad Dovalwas born in Havana, Cuba, in 1966. She attended the University of Havana and earned a BA in English literature and an MA in Spanish literature. She left Cuba in 1996 and currently lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her husband.


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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
8
Section 3
19
Copyright

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