I liked Sweet Diamond Dust a lot more than I thought I would, based on the other GR reviews. It is a solid 3.5 stars. It is very much in the multi-cultural lit camp that I was familiar with from reading authors like Sandra Cisneros (one of my favorites). Somehow Ferré lacks the same punch.
Still, for my purposes, this book was perfectly timed. The book came to me in a dusty secondhand bookshop in Rincón, Puerto Rico, and at the same time, I was focused on completing a Read Around the World challenge. Therefore, I really appreciated how much history Ferré weaves into her stories. Her work is also very aware of its connection to Puerto Rico's cultural, political, socio-economic, class, and religious orientation, particularly in contrast to the United States (referred as the Metropolis in the final story, Captain Candelario's Heroic Last Stand).
In this way, it was very educational for me.... I have scant knowledge of Puerto Rico and its literary traditions.
The downsides of the novel + short story collection are small - the stylistic choice in Sweet Diamond Dust to switch narrators and not announce them overtly was a little confusing at times. I was able to suss it out by references and clues, but it felt like work at times. A family tree and a map of Guanamí might have helped. I'm not sure why it's better to keep the reader guessing or off-kilter or unsure of who is narrating which inter-chapter. It might have been in fashion to do so in the mid-80s. Who knows.
I'm also not crazy about how Isolda's Mirror and Captain Candelario Heroic Last Stand ended so abruptly. If I were really motivated, I might want to make some guesses as to the author's intent. But, because these short stories feel so familiar, and maybe not as powerful as others I've read, I have to admit I can't be bothered.