Pascha Sotolongo
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Born
The United States
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Member Since
February 2024
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/paschasotolongo
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The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
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published
2024
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3 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
Pascha’s Recent Updates
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"quietly gorgeous, what a sleeper of a book, this should be everywhere "
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Pascha Sotolongo
and
3 other people
liked
Annie Tate Cockrum's review
of
The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories:
"A wonderful collection of strange and surreal stories. Sotolongo’s writing style is very descriptive and lyrical in a way that I really enjoyed. The subject matter from story to story varies quite a lot but there is a cohesion among the themes of bel"
Read more of this review »
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"(Read Meyer's translation, of course. She did a beautiful job, particularly for her first full-novel translation.)
Surreal, humorous, bittersweet, dreamy. Particularly enjoyed "A Trip," "Eloise," "Phalange," and "Plastic"...the asterisk vignettes in-b" Read more of this review » |
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"Strange beauties, this little bird.
I read this in translation to English (as Little Bird), done by Lily Meyer. Meyer discusses the enchantment of Donoso's stories, and of course, what translator doesn't wish to talk up their work, but from the first," Read more of this review » |
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Pascha Sotolongo
liked
a
quote
“At its core, The story is a simple one. For ages humans gave birth to humans and animals to animals. Then one day a woman in La Crosse, Wisconsin, gave birth to a puppy, a Lab-greyhound mix, to be exact. It weighed a pound, they said, though I don’t suppose that meant much to most of us at the time. It was well known that human newborns weigh around eight pounds, but average folks knew nothing of the birth weight of dogs. Later, after the story had broken and the puppy grew into a twenty-five-pound twelve-week-old, the woman consented to an interview.”
Pascha Sotolongo |
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Pascha Sotolongo
made a comment on
Virtual Book Launch
"
The Only Sound is the Wind virtual book launch date and time:
Thursday, October 3 at 7:00 PM CT. " |
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Pascha Sotolongo
is currently reading
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Pascha Sotolongo
answered
Goodreads's
question:
A young girl comes to her father, paper and pen in hand, and asks for help writing a fan letter to her favorite athlete. Dad smiles, takes pen and paper away, opens his laptop and says, "Baby, this one's important... let's let AI take the wheel."
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Pascha Sotolongo
finished reading
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Pascha Sotolongo
finished reading
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“You might think the desert dreams of the sea, but I think deserts dream of other deserts, scorched spaces just like themselves. With them, they don’t feel so alien, so bizarre. They don’t have the bother of explaining—the way they would with the sea—how it is they’re all sand and rock and sagebrush and how the only sound is the wind across the earth.”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
“You think your life is unfurling in a certain way, and you let yourself grow happy about it, a smile rising at the slightest thing. A boy in short pants eating a pastelito makes you grin like a lunatic at the vision of your own hoped‐for children, their dark shiny heads rising, year by year, from the Cuban earth, your wife towering behind them, kind and wise. Then you find yourself in a midnight cemetery guarding your mustache from the covetous ghost of an American woman you once loved. Who wouldn’t laugh?”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
“At its core, The story is a simple one. For ages humans gave birth to humans and animals to animals. Then one day a woman in La Crosse, Wisconsin, gave birth to a puppy, a Lab-greyhound mix, to be exact. It weighed a pound, they said, though I don’t suppose that meant much to most of us at the time. It was well known that human newborns weigh around eight pounds, but average folks knew nothing of the birth weight of dogs. Later, after the story had broken and the puppy grew into a twenty-five-pound twelve-week-old, the woman consented to an interview.”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
“You might think the desert dreams of the sea, but I think deserts dream of other deserts, scorched spaces just like themselves. With them, they don’t feel so alien, so bizarre. They don’t have the bother of explaining—the way they would with the sea—how it is they’re all sand and rock and sagebrush and how the only sound is the wind across the earth.”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
“You think your life is unfurling in a certain way, and you let yourself grow happy about it, a smile rising at the slightest thing. A boy in short pants eating a pastelito makes you grin like a lunatic at the vision of your own hoped‐for children, their dark shiny heads rising, year by year, from the Cuban earth, your wife towering behind them, kind and wise. Then you find yourself in a midnight cemetery guarding your mustache from the covetous ghost of an American woman you once loved. Who wouldn’t laugh?”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
“At its core, The story is a simple one. For ages humans gave birth to humans and animals to animals. Then one day a woman in La Crosse, Wisconsin, gave birth to a puppy, a Lab-greyhound mix, to be exact. It weighed a pound, they said, though I don’t suppose that meant much to most of us at the time. It was well known that human newborns weigh around eight pounds, but average folks knew nothing of the birth weight of dogs. Later, after the story had broken and the puppy grew into a twenty-five-pound twelve-week-old, the woman consented to an interview.”
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories
― The Only Sound Is the Wind: Stories


































