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Miguelito's Confession

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What is legitimized and normalized by the discrimination and institutionalized violence the de la Cruz family is forced to face? Miguelito might survive in his new adopted country, but at what price?

The novel opens with the death of Manuel de la Cruz who is wasting away from dementia. He once was a henchman for the brutal Cuban dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista. As he lays dying, he becomes lucid enough during the last minutes of life to be haunted not just by the spirits of his victims, but also by the orisha deity Oggúm of the Afro-Cuban religion known as Santeria. Although the story focuses on his son Miguelito, the trajectory of Manuel's life is also explored. Specifically, his complicity with torture prior to the Castro 1959 revolution, his counterrevolutionary terrorist activities after the change of government, his fleeing from the island, his acts of murder, and his abusive attempts to make his sensitive son Miguelito into a macho. Miguelito's story begins with being an "illegal immigrant," living in the shadows of whiteness. We explore his life growing up in the slums of New York City, the toll poverty takes on immigrant children, the violence he encountered for being a Latino, lessons he learns from a gay neighbor on how to be a gentlemen during his first date with Silvia, the juxtaposition of going to a Catholic school by day and worshipping African gods by night, and his ultimate success within the academy as a professor, even though he was never accepted as an equal by his white colleagues.

214 pages, Kindle Edition

Published March 14, 2023

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Miguel A de la Torre

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
145 reviews
July 4, 2023
A primer on Santeria and Institutional Racism

Impossible to determine if the principal idea of institutionalized racism is accurately presented or exaggerated. Suffice it to say that if it happened to one, that is one too many. The "digressions" into the mysteries of Santeria were often interesting, but perhaps overworked.
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775 reviews42 followers
April 12, 2023
Scintillating work of magical realism (?).

The conversation between Ochun and Miguelito at the end of the book is worth reading the whole book.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews