A moving novel chronicles the lives of three generations of Cuban-American women in Miami--Cuca, a believer in spirits; her daughter, Adela, an amorous cosmetologist; and Adela's daughter, Maribel, a dispassionate marketing analyst
Ana Veciana-Suarez is a syndicated columnist for Tribune Content Agency and author of the historical novel, DULCINEA (May 2023/Blackstone Publishing). She’s also written the young adult novel, Flight to Freedom (Scholastic) and a collection of essays, Birthday Parties in Heaven: Thoughts on Life, Love, Grief, and Other Matters of the Heart. (Plume) A previous book, The Chin Kiss King: A Novel (FSG) was nominated for the prestigious IMPAC Award, an international competition in Dublin. Two nonfiction books about the Hispanic media were published by The Media Institute, a think tank in Washington D.C. Her commentary has been included in several anthologies, and it has appeared in Readers Digest, Oprah, Woman’s Day, The Washington Post Magazine, Parenting, and Latina magazine. In 2019, she was awarded the Cintas Fellowship for Creative Writing. She has also received an Individual Artist Fellowship Award from the state of Florida for fiction writing. She lives with her husband in Miami, where she eats two Dove dark chocolates every morning before she writes. Now that her children are grown and out of the house, she admits they taught her immeasurable patience and humility.
Beautiful beautiful beautiful. I read this nearly 20 years ago and still remember it. A book about life, love, pain, mothers, women and letting go. Tissues necessary. And a highlighter for the chapter on Cuca’s 8 life lessons. I loved her scenes the most...
Over Thanksgiving break, I finished reading Chin Kiss King by Ana Veciana-Suarez's. The novel is set in Miami with flashbacks to Cuba; I loved how the author brought nuances of growing up in a bi-cultural environment. The story is about a woman who gives birth to a handicapped infant and how this ties her with her mother and grandmother. The inter-generational relationship is very moving. Some of the conflict that comes between mothers and daughters is tied to the aspects of Cuban culture that each tries to keep and each dismisses. There is discussion of pregnancy, birth, and loss. It made me think about the wishes we have for our kids, how we cope when they do not turn out as expected, and how we evolve was parents. In fact, I was so touched by the story that I started crying on my plane ride back to Seattle. I had to ask the flight attendant for a tissue who looked very alarmed. I explained that I was reading a very moving tale.
This is also my fourth book for the Armchair Traveler Reading Challenge. I have two finish two more books for it by the end of December; I am not sure if I am going to make it with exams right around the corner. Here's hoping that I do and then I can be eligible for prizes.
Spoiler Alert: This book resonated with me because it concerns a special needs child as much as it concerns his mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. Each of these women is trapped by something inside her that informs who she is and how she conducts herself in the world. In the five months we spend with these characters, we watch them push away from one another, but, ultimately, draw inextricably closer as the baby boy's death becomes a reality. I have a special needs grandchild, and I so understood the grief with which these women lived.
A good book for anyone interested in reading about the relationships between different generations of a Cuban-American family, or about motherhood - it's beautifully written, and the character relationships are developed/revealed well. However, there isn't much of a moving plotline, and the story is sad the whole way through...so for someone not particularly interested in Cuba / motherhood, this might not necessarily be worth the somber read.
Inside the jacket the book is described as heart wrenching. It really is, and I am not often up for taking on that feeling unnecessarily. It is a good story about three generations of Cuban American women and the son born to one of them with severe birth defects.
A delightful first novel. All about raising an infant born with disabilities before he dies. Love the three generations of Hispanic women. This book made me feel so wonderful while reading it. Thanks, Jayne, for recommending it to me!
This is the saddest book I've ever read! Just thinking about it makes me sad. 3 generations of women and one baby boy and their journey through life and what it holds.
Well written book, very sad story. I liked it overall. It gives you a look at the way some cuban immigrants live and also has a very touching medical drama.
The Chin Kiss King by Ana Veciana Suarez. I happened upon this book and chose to annotate it because of the beautiful cover, and prose in the first chapter. So rich, so full in culture and language. A Cuban- American g- grandmother welcomes her 1st g-grandchild. There is connotative meaning in the title that I was unaware of either culturally or otherwise. A story that began in beauty, slowly became disconcerting, sad, and a perhaps testament of cultural and or social climates of today. I’ve never been a fan of literature, though appreciative of its common views into traumas and mores. 4 stars in spite of my biases, very well written, but verrry slow with not much of a plot, and a lot of flowery language. On the flip, annotation was sooo fun. I had seen them done, but never embarked. Annotating is when you write your reactions and thoughts and doodles in the columns of a great book! You can search methods on Insta and on Youtube particularly if you are interested in this trend/ hobby.
I’ve never read a book that had so much love for a child and was so attuned with nature and the universe. This book made you feel such anguish for the three main characters.
I could not finish this novel. What I read of it was depressing. I have this thing that I always finish a novel I start, even if painful. Not this one. It was worth the 2 cents I paid at a garage sale.
I wanted to like this book, but while it is readable, it is not rewarding. It seems to want to be a Cuban-American magic realist novel, but the magic has little purpose or resonance, and on the whole, the novel really lacks depth.