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The Eternal Forest: A Memoir of the Cuban Diaspora

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In the tradition of The Yellow House and Half Broke Horses, a memoir of the Cuban diaspora that follows one family’s exile from the island, through a lyrical exploration of memory, cultural mythology, and the history of Cuban-American relations.

History is undeniably dominated by its men, but the stories Elena Sheppard was brought up on were almost always about Cuba’s women—everyday women, whose names would be forgotten and buried along with their bones unless someone took the effort to remember them.

Cifuentes, Cuba, in the 1950s was nearly idyllic—at least that’s how Elena’s grandparents, Rosita and Gustavo Delgado, remember the Eden they left. When Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, Gustavo was placed on a list of political undesirables, and by the end of 1960, the couple and their two daughters had fled to Florida, with nothing more than five dollars, and a suitcase each. The Delgados were certain they would return to Cifuentes within a few months, after Castro’s reign had run its course. But they never went back, and a piece of each of their identities became frozen in that moment.

In 1987, Elena was the first in Gustavo and Rosita’s family to be born in the United States, but through the memories that lived on in her grandmother’s mind, Cuba became the foundation of her childhood. Elena takes us inside these stories, and as we travel back and forth across the narrow Florida Straits that separate Miami and Havana, we also weave between past and present, to discover family secrets that are on the brink of being lost to time.

In lyrical yet unflinching prose, The Eternal Forest follows one family’s exile from their homeland and in so doing, it tells the larger political story of the Cuban Revolution and its diaspora. Through a spellbinding blend of cultural myth, historical texts, and personal narrative, The Eternal Forest seeks to understand the nature of inheritance, how trauma and memory are passed down through generations, and what it means to yearn for an island you can never fully know.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published September 30, 2025

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Elena Sheppard

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 75 reviews
Profile Image for Shereadbookblog.
1,000 reviews
July 28, 2025
Beautifully and lovingly written, this is the story of one family’s flight from Cuba to the United States. Intermingled with a thorough, but not overwhelming history of Cuba, it delves into the lives of three generations of Cuban women and their extended family. Is it not often the women who hold the families together and are the guardians of memories?

I enjoyed learning more about the history of this island nation and, in fact, saw some concerning parallels that serve as a cautionary for our times.…rewriting history, making people doubt, making people forget, maps changing when government changes.

As the author recounts her family history, I couldn’t help but smile at some of the stories and how it’s often the case that there are several different versions of how events unfolded. Most impressive is the lifelong love and caring that the author and her mother expressed for the matriarch of the family, the abuela who, with her husband, made the difficult decision to flee Cuba upon the rise of Fidel Castro. Despite leaving behind the island they had called home, there is always a pull and emotional connection that binds them to it, a connection that spans generations.

Thanks to @NetGalley and @StMartinsPress for the DRC.
8 reviews
May 17, 2025
Elena Sheppard’s “The Eternal Forest: A Memoir of the Cuban Diaspora” is one of the most unique and rewarding memoirs I’ve encountered. She blends history, memory, myth, and familial storytelling into a rich tapestry that will touch the heart of anyone who has ever felt homesick for a place and time they’ve never been. Her narrative flows like a conversation with someone who is remembering key details of a story—adding color, depth, and flavor—but pieces everything together in a beautifully lyrical examination of how family, history, and tragedy impact and inform identity for generations to come.
Profile Image for Alison.
1,906 reviews17 followers
July 15, 2025
The Eternal Forest is a poignant and heartfelt rendering of a family whose roots stretch between Cuba and the States. Sheppard artfully blends history as it pertains to generations of her family and Cuba.

Sheppard uses three pillars-her grandmother, mother, and herself-to weave a history that spans over one hundred years. The experiences that each generation faces- from regime change in Cuba, fleeing Cuba, and trying to grapple with identity as a Cuban American- is impactful and thought provoking.

With an identity that lies between two countries, Sheppard grapples with the rich tapestry that is her history and that of the Cuban diaspora.

Thank you to the publisher via NetGalley for the opportunity to respond to this book with my honest opinions.
Profile Image for Stacey.
1,111 reviews153 followers
October 2, 2025
“We came with five dollars and one suitcase.” A phrase repeated often through the years regarding the exile from Cuba. Filled with heartfelt nostalgia and beautiful prose, Elena Sheppard recounts the journey from a tumultuous Cuba to the United States through stories passed down through generations and the treasure of a tape recording of her grandmother.

“So much gets abandoned in the forest of the past, particularly in exile. Our house. Our lives. Our Mariana.” This line is especially haunting when I reflected on Elena’s memoir, at everything lost and forfeited for a better life. You can voluntarily leave your homeland, but it’s a part of you and calling you to return. The brief history of Cuba was a nice addition(not too much) and necessary to show before and after Castro’s takeover. The impact of Castro on the people of Cuba was devastating.

This is a lovely book about family, sacrifice, and memories.

Thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for an early copy. A big thank you to the author for sharing her family’s story.
Profile Image for Mai H..
1,393 reviews868 followers
2025
October 3, 2025
Memoir March TBR

📱 Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press
Profile Image for Jessica Haider.
2,247 reviews342 followers
November 14, 2025
The Eternal Forest is a memoir that feels like cracking open a family heirloom—one that’s been tucked away in a cedar chest alongside faded photos, whispered secrets, and at least one grandmother who could out-story any historian. Elena Sheppard braids myth, memory, and political upheaval into something both intimate and sweeping, making Cuba not just a place her family fled but the epicenter of her identity.

What I loved most is how Sheppard centers the women—the Rositas of the world whose lives rarely make it into textbooks but absolutely make it into our bones. The prose is lyrical without drifting into precious territory, and her reflection on inherited trauma and diaspora longing lands with a quiet, insistent weight. You can practically hear the Florida Straits humming between the lines.

It’s not a light read, but it’s a beautiful one—part family chronicle, part political compass, part elegy for an island imagined and remembered. A moving exploration of what we keep, what we lose, and what becomes eternal when home is both a memory and a myth.
Profile Image for Lindsey Beguiristain.
137 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2026
12/31: full review to come in the AM because I’m currently sobbing

1/1: Screaming, crying, throwing up. I'm very emotional as we've closed out 2025 and this book contributed greatly to that. I was always told that my family left Havana in the 60's with $5 in their pocket, and my grandma's jewelry hidden in my dad's diaper. Turns out, that was the same for many other families in Cuba, as Elena described they were allotted $5 and one suitcase when they left in the first wave after Castro's revolution.

I saw so much of myself in Elena's words and thoughts about her Cuban family. I also could make so many parallels between our families. This made me feel so seen and like I do actually have a connection to my Cuban family and the island even when it feels like I don't. The way Elena described some Cuban families having a genetic "sadness" made me think so much about my dad, grandfather, uncles, and cousins. Everyone had something haunting them whether it be mental illness, anger, or addiction and I've always believed that generational trauma, especially in Cubans who fled the revolution, was real.

Much like Elena, I relate to having one parent born in and who fled from Cuba, while another is American as apple pie. Fortunately, her Cuban parent is her mother and I feel like that causes such a stronger bond with your family, memories, and culture. Since my grandmother, Maria Rosa, passed away, much of my dad's family has felt strained and fractured. When my grandfather, Jose Maria, passed in 2016, those fractures turned into breaks and my dad has not been in touch with his family in Florida. I always have wondered if my grandmother never passed away so young if things would have been different. If she hadn't died, my dad wouldn't have fallen into addiction, maybe my parents wouldn't have gotten divorced, and maybe I would have a much closer relationship with my Beguiristain family and therefore my Cuban heritage. But Elena's book made me feel like it's okay for me to have this passion for my heritage and it's okay to yearn for a land I have never visited. Now I know it's okay to forge my own path and create my own special relationship with Cuba.

This book also made me think about all of the suffering in Cuba and how members of my family who stayed likely do not have the proper resources needed to survive. In that same breath, however, there are so many people living in countries with similar hardships who try to seek better lives in the United States. With how our government is treating immigrants right now, I can't help but recount how we welcomed Cubans with open arms in the 50s and 60s because they were fleeing a communist state. Now, people fleeing similar situations are hunted down like animals and thrown in concentration camps at the borders. Our government and our citizens have lost the entire plot that is the foundation of our democracy. Immigrants are what make America great. And fuck ICE.

I miss my grandparents, aunts, and uncles who have lost their lives over the past 27 years and I wish I got to talk to them about their stories from Cuba like Elena did. I'm going to talk to my dad about this book though. That's about all I can do. And I'm excited for the day that I get to visit the island with which my family has such a loving and painful history.
Profile Image for Emily | emilyisoverbooked.
926 reviews121 followers
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November 14, 2025
Thanks to St. Martin's Press and Macmillan Audio for the gifted copies!

While I usually prefer memoirs to be read by the author, I was pleased to see that this one was narrated by Frankie Corzo, a favorite narrator of books by Chanel Cleeton and Silvia Moreno-Garcia. I haven't read much about the Cuban Diaspora, so this was a great way to learn more through the generations of the Delgado family. The balance of history and personal experience made this one special!
Profile Image for Steph Espie.
26 reviews
February 22, 2026
3.5⭐️ More of a memoir of a family who happens to be Cuban rather than a meaningful reflection of the long reaching impact of the Cuban revolution.
Profile Image for Desirae.
3,239 reviews188 followers
November 24, 2025
Elena Sheppard’s The Eternal Forest: A Memoir of the Cuban Diaspora is a richly lyrical, deeply evocative chronicle—at once intimate family history, poetic reflection, and political meditation. Over the course of the book, Sheppard weaves together the last century of her family’s life, migrating between the sun-washed streets of pre-revolutionary Cuba, the storm-tossed uncertainty of exile, and the layered memories of her American childhood. The result is a memoir that feels both personal and mythic—a song for a homeland that exists as much in memory as in geography.
From the very outset, Sheppard’s prose is lush and textured, suffused with metaphor and memory in a way that reads less like a conventional memoir and more like a tapestry or an incantation. The title itself, The Eternal Forest, captures the core of her project: the forest is not just a place, but a metaphor for memory, legacy, and loss. Sheppard describes how her life is tangled up in the past—“concentric circles on a cave wall, a name passed lip to ear, a whisper in the dead of night.” There is a magical quality to these sentences, but they are anchored by real pain.

At its heart, the memoir follows three generations of Cuban women—her grandmother Rosita, her mother Margarita, and Sheppard herself—as they carry the weight of home in their bones. Her grandparents, Rosita and Gustavo Delgado, fled their modest town of Cifuentes in the early days of Castro’s revolution with “nothing more than five dollars, and a suitcase each.” Their flight, initially brimming with hope that they would return, becomes permanent, freezing their Cuban identity in a moment of rupture.

Lush Language and Evocative Storytelling
What makes The Eternal Forest so compelling is its language. Sheppard writes in a voice that is at once conversational and incantatory. In passages recalling her grandmother’s recollections of Cifuentes in the 1950s, she conjures a nearly Edenic landscape: palm trees, rumba, sugar money, salt breezes. arts.columbia.edu+1 But this idyllic memory always flickers with shadows: of political tension, loss, and exile. Sheppard moves back and forth in time—with vignettes that feel like shards of stained glass, refracting personal and collective history.

This non-linear structure closely mirrors how memory actually works: not as a tidy, chronological narrative, but as a forest of stories—some wild, some pruned, others tangled, others lost. Southern Review of Books praises this “vignette structure … like an excavation of memory, an unearthing of its fragmented yet enduring nature.”

Mental Illness, Trauma, and Inheritance
A particularly powerful thread in Sheppard’s memoir is the exploration of mental illness in her family, and how trauma, grief, and secrets pass down through generations. Her aunt Mariana, haunted by unspoken pain, died by suicide—a presence that continues to loom over the family. Shelf Awareness+1 Sheppard does not shy away from the darkness: she reflects on her aunt’s “dark periods,” the inexplicable moments of despair, and the ways in which mental illness was misunderstood or ignored in her Cuban family.

At the same time, Sheppard is candid about her own anxiety. According to reviews, she connects her aunt’s suicide to other losses in the family—and to a broader, multigenerational trauma rooted in dislocation and exile. Shelf Awareness This is not a memoir that treats trauma as a footnote; instead, it gives trauma a place in the forest of memory, examining how grief shapes identity and how the weight of mental illness can live in inheritance as much as in genes.

Identity, Belonging, and Exile
Sheppard’s reflection on her own identity is deeply moving. As she has written elsewhere, she struggled with imposter syndrome around her Cuban identity—her surname is Anglo (Sheppard), her Spanish imperfect—and she often asked herself, Am I Cuban enough? People.com That question becomes a driving force for her work: she visited Cuba, traced her family's footsteps, recorded her grandmother’s stories, and waded into archives—all to understand her heritage on her own terms.
In her Latina Media Co op-ed, Sheppard writes that immigration “cleaves a family’s history into a before and an after.” LatinaMedia.Co The rupture of exile imposes a kind of duality: physical distance, yes, but also a psychic distance between what is remembered and what is lost. Her memoir becomes a conversation between those two worlds. Rosita, her grandmother, is for her a “portal to the past”; Sheppard records her at 97 years old, aware that memories are slipping away, and that this portal might soon close.

Historical and Political Context: Refugees, Revolution, and U.S. Asylum Policy
While The Eternal Forest is deeply personal, it is also political. Sheppard’s family story parallels the larger history of Cuba and the Cuban diaspora. Gustavo Delgado, her grandfather, was put on a list of “political undesirables” in the early years of the revolution—a designation that forced his hand. Macmillan Publishers Their journey to Florida is not just a family flight—it is part of the wider exodus of Cubans who left under duress, leaving behind memories, land, and often whole communities.
Sheppard contextualizes this personal history within U.S.–Cuba relations, not in dry diplomatic prose but in the emotional register of memory. While the book itself does not necessarily dive deep into detailed policy, the memoir implicitly touches on the fraught dynamics of asylum and refuge. It evokes how exiles like her grandparents came to the U.S., driven by peril and promise, and how their identity and legacy were forever shaped by that journey.

In doing so, her story resonates with the history of U.S. policies like the “wet foot, dry foot” policy—a policy (in place from 1995 until 2017) under which Cubans who made landfall (“dry foot”) in the U.S. could stay, but those intercepted at sea (“wet foot”) were typically sent back. Although Sheppard’s grandparents fled mostly by land (or in early decades, via other routes), her family’s narrative is part of a larger diasporic story shaped by U.S. immigration policies that treated Cuban refugees uniquely. That policy—and the broader politics of asylum—is woven implicitly into the fabric of her personal story, reminding the reader that exile is never just a private matter, but always entangled with geopolitical forces.

Strengths of the Memoir

Poetic Prose: The beauty of Sheppard’s writing is one of the book’s greatest strengths. Her lyrical, evocative style makes memory palpably real, and her metaphors—especially the forest—are resonant and haunting.

Generational Storytelling: By centering three generations of women, Sheppard offers a powerful counter-narrative to conventional histories that often focus on male political actors. Instead, The Eternal Forest shows how women carry memory, trauma, and legacy.

Honest Treatment of Mental Illness: The book’s willingness to engage with grief, depression, suicide, and anxiety is courageous. Sheppard neither romanticizes nor reduces these struggles; she locates them in family and history in a way that feels compassionate and truthful.

Historical and Cultural Insight: Through personal narrative, Sheppard provides a textured portrait of Cuban history, revolution, exile, and diaspora. While deeply self-reflective, she never loses sight of the broader political forces at play.

Identity and Belonging: Her exploration of “Am I Cuban enough?” speaks to a universal immigrant experience—longing for home, negotiating identity, reconciling memory with reality.

Potential Limitations

For readers seeking a strictly chronological or policy-heavy history, the memoir’s vignette structure may feel fragmentary.


The poetically dense prose, while beautiful, may not appeal to all readers—some might find it too ethereal, longing for more concrete narrative.


Conclusion
The Eternal Forest is a stunning debut: a memoir that feels like a spell, a lament, and a reclamation all at once. Elena Sheppard has created more than a family history—she has summoned a liminal space where memory lives, where exile is both wound and inheritance, and where the ache for a homeland is carried, tenderly, across generations.

Her exploration of mental illness—through the tragic figure of her aunt Mariana and her own struggles with anxiety—adds an emotional depth that is not simply biographical, but psychological and intergenerational. This is not just a story about Cuba and exile; it is a story about how trauma travels, how we inherit spirits as well as names, and how we make sense of belonging when our roots lie in two places.

In a political era where the notion of asylum is fraught and contested, The Eternal Forest gently reminds us that the cost of refuge and exile is not only political—it is deeply personal. Sheppard’s memoir challenges us to consider how policies like “wet foot, dry foot” shape not only mass migration but individual lives, psyches, and families.

Ultimately, this book is a gift. For anyone interested in diaspora, identity, memory, trauma, or simply in beautiful, tender storytelling, The Eternal Forest is a profound read—both a tribute and a reckoning, a mourning and a celebration, resonating long after the final page.
Profile Image for Lori.
488 reviews84 followers
July 12, 2025
In "The Eternal Forest", author Elena Sheppard takes readers on a journey her and her family's past, weaving stories passed down by family members and her own extensive research over the time periods. Growing up Cuban-American in the United States, she has long heard tales of her family's beginnings in Cifuentes, Cuba and the long, complicated path that led the grandparents to flee the country due to the Cuban Revolution - all because her grandfather had run (but hadn't won!) for mayor in the years leading to Fidel Castro's rise.

While this work may be titled a memoir, it is better described as a literary exploration or rumination; Sheppard weaves in detailed historical research, references to other literature and writers, elements of fantasy/mythology, the stories her grandmother, mother, and other family members passed down, and her own experiences and perspectives. This is a complex work as she explores her own identity and the historical events that led to her own existence; the legacy of her ancestors - both good and bad - including the looming fear of suicide passed through the generations; and her return to Cuba as an adult as she meets the family and family friends that she has only heard about in stories.

The prose in this work was beautiful and transportive, and as someone who knew very little about the Cuban Revolution, it gave me a better grasp of the event both historically and how it caused the upheaval of life for many Cuban civilians during the time. I did struggle at times with the structure of this book; it doesn't follow a clear chronological format and jumps between time periods and settings frequently, which made it difficult at times to keep track of all the different characters and events. While I think it would have benefited from a little more organization of passages, it didn't detract from the work as a whole.

Very much a recommended read when "The Eternal Forest" is published in September 2025!
Profile Image for Lin Mendoza.
77 reviews3 followers
July 2, 2025
I adored every sentence of this beautifully written, emotional memoir.

Elena Sheppard takes us along as she remembers her family's history. This includes the history of Cuba, the history of Cuban migration to the United States, and the history of her individual family members. While it is the story of her family, it is the story of many families who have to leave all they have behind for a better life, and the story of the new generations who are straddling a line between who their family is versus who they are as first, second, or third generation qualified Americans. She hits on themes of inheritance, mental illness, connectedness, identity, and motherhood. It is simply a beautiful story and it is even more beautifully written.

Admittedly, I am part of the Cuban diaspora and maybe I am not the most unbiased of readers, as I was deeply invested in this the moment I read the description. I loved it so much I didn't want it to end. A masterpiece, imho!

Thank you NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for the ARC.
Profile Image for Nicole Means.
433 reviews18 followers
March 16, 2026
“The Eternal Forest” is a beautiful tribute to the author’s grandparents who fled Cuba during the first wave of exiles, whose experiences were much different than those who fled in later years. To me, the most powerful part of the book is when the author shares the different ways each generation in her family experiences revisiting Cuba. The 1st generation, her grandparents who made the decision to flee, have grand memories of the island in all its glory and dreamed of returning home someday but could never go home until Castro’s regime fell. They risked so much to leave and they were viewed as traitors in their homeland. The second generation, their children, have difficulty reconciling with going back because it is sad to “see the erosion” of once was. The third, the author, feels guilty because, rather than feeling sadness when going to the island, she feels curiosity and longing to connect to her family. She has only heard stories from her grandparents and parents and welcomes the opportunity to meet family members she has only heard about in stories that never seemed real to her.
These generational feelings are similar for many immigrant groups, and the author was lucky to have a family who openly shared their stories and wanted to remember and return home. When they moved to the U.S., they didn’t want to assimilate because they had every intention of going home. They settled in Little Havana and found so many an enclave of neighbors who kept the fantasy alive that they would return home. The true tragedy is that, although many of the original exiles have now passed away, their children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren can visit Cuba for a short time but can never fully return home. The author provokes the reader to ponder how one decision can change your entire fate using the example of how her grandfather’s decision to leave. While he left, his brother chose to stay, and each side of the family had very different upbringings. The brothers never saw each other again, and there must have been immense guilt by both that their decisions separated their families.
I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in the history of Cuba and the people who experienced it.
Profile Image for Sacha.
2,049 reviews
September 7, 2025
4 stars

Like any good memoir, the focal point here is on the life of the author, but there is so much more to this one.

Sheppard tells her story by incorporating historical information about Cuba, the treatment of Cuban people at home and abroad, and her own family's intimate experiences. These threads all weave together into Sheppard's story. What's almost more powerful than the content of the narrative is the style in which it is told. There's a distinct literary quality to this memoir that frequently had me more focused on the skill of this writer than on her content. I could imagine coming back to Sheppard for nonfiction OR fiction, and that's not a common thought for me. I really appreciate the seamless writing and mindful structure.

Mental health plays a major role in Sheppard's family. Readers who are sensitive to conversations about this topic and to mentions of suicide need to know that these are running themes.

I learned a lot about the author and also about some of the historical and regional content and very much enjoyed listening to this audiobook.

*Special thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for this alc, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
Profile Image for Anabel Nosek.
63 reviews5 followers
January 6, 2026
“Next year in Havana.”

I think I found my new favorite book. Listened on audiobook as I tend to like to do with memoirs and I can’t recommend it enough. The reader nailed the sweeping emotion of this book with great effect, and hearing the Spanish parts read out loud in a Cuban accent is a million times more effective than it would have been just reading them on the page. It made it even more heartbreaking.

I truly believe that being Cuban is one of the best things to be in the world. However, I, like the author, am only half Cuban and was fully raised in the USA with only limited access to Cuban culture. This book was made for me.

That being said, I think this should be a must-read for any woman. It is, at its core, about family and discovering one’s personal history, presented in a way that is so distinctly feminine.

This is joining my Mount Rushmore of books for sure.
Wow.
Profile Image for Sarah.
69 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2025
With being a first generation Cuban American, longing to see Cuba with my own eyes, and loving my moms story of coming to America in 1962 as a Pedro Pan kid…I love reading anything that has to do with it. I appreciate this book because it’s written from my perspective. I enjoyed the beginning in the end of the book were she shared history much more than the middle which was heavily on suicide and depression in her family.
The author (just like all of us) needs Jesus …The reason that she feels incomplete isn’t because they are exiled. It’s because she needs the shed blood of Jesus Christ to make her whole.
Profile Image for Jayne.
209 reviews11 followers
October 21, 2025
Based on the title, I expected more about the diaspora. I have a keen interest in Cuba and wanted more. Find them mentally the book is about the family both stateside and in Cuba. It is not a great read and I don’t recommend it for either information about life in Cuba or the memoir about the various relatives. 2.5 stars
Profile Image for Lauren Oertel.
240 reviews38 followers
January 27, 2026
The historical aspects of this novel worked well for me. I loved the dips in and out of Cuban history, without getting into rabbit holes/weeds of details. That content provided helpful context for the author’s story, and I thought her perspective was nuanced and thoughtful, rather than falling into some black-and-white narratives I’ve seen before.

The family story sometimes lost my attention, as it could be repetitive at times, and dip into melodrama. Not that the experiences weren’t heavy, but the writing of them leaned that on occasion.

This was a strong book overall, and I hope to see more stories weaving history with family narratives as this one did. Especially from those whose families also immigrated to the U.S. I would read more from this author.

Thank you to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for an audio copy of this book.
Profile Image for Brandi.
413 reviews20 followers
January 3, 2026
An excellent memoir about connecting with homeland. I enjoyed the look at the different generations of the Delgado. I thought this book did a great job of combining memoir with history.

Thank you Macmillan Audio for an advanced copy of this audiobook!
Profile Image for Beth.
762 reviews8 followers
Read
March 25, 2026
DNF...I just couldn't make myself care about anyone in this memoir which is sad as a memoir is my favorite genre.
13 reviews
February 4, 2026
The first 60 pages I found to be boring but maybe because they were heavy on history. I enjoyed the middle part of the book the most. There are a lot of really great one liners that make you think. One of my favorites was “beginnings happen without announcing themselves”. This book made me think about the impact people can have on generations in their families and how we can remember those who came before us. I did learn more about the Cuban diaspora and what that looked like for Cubans.
94 reviews
December 10, 2025
I have a few things in common with the author… I am also a first generation Cuban, who grew up in Miami and New York, who went to Princeton, who thinks about how I will possibly convey Cuban affinity to my very American child, and who wonders endlessly what life in Cuba pre -Castro was like. As I’ve started reading more about the Cuban diaspora, each book has helped me understand a little more about the history, the cultural and political context, and the smaller individual stories that define a community. For me, this supplemental detail has helped color in the blanks of my own life, as a cultural Cuban-American that will never be able to deeply connect with the suffering of those that were truly exiled (partially because I’m so annoyed of them hamming it up).

Elena’s story was in many ways familiar, in many ways not. I think this book must have been deeply cathartic for her to write, and tell the story of her family, and the clearly challenging psychological threads that tie them together. For me, unfortunately, the book spent a little too much time musing / completing stylistic flourishes on the fringes of the memoir, and the family, when what I wanted was something a little different, and probably a little more trite - what are the profoundly Cuban stories that make up life in Miami post exile, and what are the voyeuristic stories set in Cuba both pre- and post- revolution. I acknowledge that it’s a “basic” request, and I think I may have gone into this book with the wrong mindset.

If Elena were ever to read this, I would say thank you for telling the story of your family, I can’t imagine it was easy to do. It made me proud to see somebody else who is proud of their background in the same complicated way that I am.
Profile Image for Mariah.
309 reviews
August 23, 2025
The ghosts of our ancestors haunting our bones through our stories and growing diasporas. This is Elena Sheppard’s story that weaves familial history, Cuban history and folklore, and memoir to contextualize the experience of what it means to be Cuban American. The historical context highlights the various reasons people have been forced to create new identities on foreign lands. But a piece of Cuba is passed down through each generation. Yes, some of it is traumatic – but that is what Sheppard speaks to here. There is a lot to discuss when you consider the origins if your ancestor’s folklore and her ability to eloquently pass down generations of stories for her readers. If we are sharing stories – our ancestors can never perish.
I thoroughly enjoy memoirs that weave stories especially within a cultural context because it shows us the way identities are forged from these ideas. Sheppard postulates in her memoir “ghosts wait too” and some of these stories have been waiting for nearly a century to be told in this memoir. There are ancient roots to all our stories and dissecting them through a historical lens is a great way to express a biography and memoir. This is a story about her family but also Sheppard’s story. I appreciate the blend of the biographical and memoir that created this interesting historical piece of Cuban folklore. These are stories from a familial line spanning generations being told in The Eternal Forest. Thank you St. Martin’s Press, Elena Sheppard, and Netgalley for this advanced digital copy in exchange for a review.
Read more recommendations, ARC impressions, and reviews onhttps://brujerialibrary.wordpress.com/

Profile Image for Jane.
1,157 reviews23 followers
July 4, 2025
Elena Sheppard's grandparents made the decision to leave Cuba for Florida in 1960 shortly after Fidel Castro seized power in 1959 and her grandfather Gustavo was listed as an undesirable. With them were their two daughters. The exile was supposed to be short, however it became more permanent. Elena was the first generation to be born in the USA in 1987, however Cuba would be a part of her upbringing and familial memories.

This is a book about Cuban history as well as the personal and family history of the generations of Sheppard's family (particularly the women) and it made for interesting reading. Sheppard provided me with an understanding of a country and it's history that I really knew nothing about. It is also a story about a family who was uprooted and split apart by a revolution and their subsequent exile and filled with heartbreak, joy, loss, love and reunion. I am also an immigrant so I could relate to some of it. The prose flows well and keeps the reader engaged with the story.

I received an advanced reading copy of this book from the publisher as part of the Goodreads Giveaways program.
Profile Image for Sandy.
483 reviews
January 20, 2026
As a former resident of Miami in the 60’s and friend to several Cuban exiles, I was really looking forward to reading this memoir. While some of the older people in the author’s life have the most interesting memories, the author actually has not much to relate to. She tries to write a memoir out of bits and pieces culled from her grandmother’s slipping memory. The author writes well and it’s my opinion that this book would have been better written as a novel.
Profile Image for Lily.
1,608 reviews13 followers
January 26, 2026
In this fascinatingly complex new memoir, Elena Sheppard discusses her life as her grandparents’ first grandchild born in the United States after their departure from Cuba in 1960, shortly after Castro took power and her grandfather Gustavo was placed on a list of political undesirables. Having never returned to Cifuentes and the home they left behind, she explores how Cuba became foundational to her childhood and her family’s stories. As she works to understand her family’s exile and the larger political narrative of the Cuban Revolution, Sheppard mixes cultural myths, historical texts, and personal narratives in this moving and complex memoir. Packed with details and incredibly emotional, this mixes the micro and macro narratives in a fantastic way that really allows readers to understand what the Cuban Revolution meant for some sections of the population. As a story of immigrants and family trauma, this book is incredibly timely and such a valuable read for everyone, regardless of how recently their family immigrated to the United States. Sheppard puts together a fascinating narrative that pulls readers into her family’s story and the complex histories and myths they live with, and readers will appreciate the investigative and narrative work she has put into this immersive read.

Thanks to NetGalley and St Martin's Press for the advance copy.
Profile Image for Marcia Crabtree.
326 reviews8 followers
December 15, 2025
“The Eternal Forest” is an homage to Elena Sheppard’s family, particularly to her grandmother Rosita, to their lives in Cuba before they fled Castro’s new regime, and to the family left behind. Through extensive research, discussions with her grandmother and family, and her own visits to her family’s ancestral home, Elana regales the reader with fascinating insights about life in Cuba both before and after Castro seized power, both for the wealthy and the poor, and what life was like for those who left during the various waves of Cuban migration. As she says, the fourth wave, supposedly the last sanctioned by both the U.S. and Cuba, technically is over, but people are still coming in droves, having nothing in Cuba to sustain them.

Elana’s language is evocative and lyrical and extremely intimate, to be expected since she’s revealing intimate knowledge regarding family history. What shines through is the love that each family member has for each other and for the homeland they left behind, particularly as each year on Christmas Eve they continue to recite, “Next year in Havana.”

Thank you to NetGalley for giving me an advanced reader’s copy of “The Eternal Forest” to read prior to its publication. My opinions are voluntary.
17 reviews
January 16, 2026
Thank you to the author, Elena Sheppard and St. Martin's Press for the giveaway copy.

The author beautifully captures the heartbreak, resilience, hope, and longing that I believe live in the hearts of many immigrant families. I cannot begin to imagine the pain of having no choice but to leave the only place you have ever called home, but what truly stayed with me was the feeling of not fully belonging, especially through her mother’s experience.

The identity crisis of not being fully American, yet not entirely from your country of origin, felt really relatable. There is a sense of being caught in between: being curious about your roots, wanting to hold on to them, or even longing for a place you don’t really know, while also having to assimilate into a new culture. At the same time, the book acknowledges the complexity of growing up appreciating and embracing certain aspects of what it means to be American.

I thank the author for sharing such an intimate glimpse into her family’s story and for giving voice to the heartbreak of so many people who were forced into exile.
Profile Image for Darlene.
1,977 reviews221 followers
July 2, 2025
Living under a dictatorship and miserable conditions, the author's family must leave their beloved home in Cuba, many friends, and relatives. Elena Sheppard takes us through her family history, and we see how difficult it is for her to separate herself from her genealogy.

The story takes us back and forth in time, inner feelings and memories pitted against global occurrences. A little poetic while trying to be accurate.

I found reading or listening to this on Kindle's text-to-speech feature less than ideal, even though I felt I followed the author's tale well. I would have loved it more with a narrator, preferably the author. One thing TTS does horribly is other languages. Even though Ms. Sheppard translates her few statements and poems gracefully, I would rather hear the language of Elena's life. Then again, I am not fluent in Spanish. I'd still need the translation.

I was lucky to get this copy from NetGalley.
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