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The Other Side: El Otro Lado

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Characterized by respect for the past, delight in the sensory details of the present, and tentative but cherished hope for the future, a collection of poems culminates in the title poem about the poet's return to her native Dominican Republic. 15,000 first printing. Tour.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1995

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About the author

Julia Alvarez

97 books4,175 followers
Julia Alvarez left the Dominican Republic for the United States in 1960 at the age of ten. She is the author of six novels, three books of nonfiction, three collections of poetry, and eleven books for children and young adults. She has taught and mentored writers in schools and communities across America and, until her retirement in 2016, was a writer-in-residence at Middlebury College. Her work has garnered wide recognition, including a Latina Leader Award in Literature from the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, the Hispanic Heritage Award in Literature, the Woman of the Year by Latina magazine, and inclusion in the New York Public Library’s program “The Hand of the Poet: Original Manuscripts by 100 Masters, from John Donne to Julia Alvarez.” In the Time of the Butterflies, with over one million copies in print, was selected by the National Endowment for the Arts for its national Big Read program, and in 2013 President Obama awarded Alvarez the National Medal of Arts in recognition of her extraordinary storytelling.

Photo copyright by Brandon Cruz González
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5 stars
68 (26%)
4 stars
93 (35%)
3 stars
87 (33%)
2 stars
12 (4%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews
494 reviews22 followers
June 27, 2015
Actual Rating 4.5 rounded up for moments of absolute brilliance.

This book was a beautiful exploration of exile and the meaning of home. The Other Side/El Otro Lado (from now on referred to by either of its titles) is far more focused than Alvarez's later The Woman I Kept to Myself, really zeroing in on her experience as a Dominican-American and her discovery of who she is and how she fits into both/either/neither of her worlds. This comes in part, from the presence of longer poems and more focused sequences. This book is divided into six sections, three of which are single poems and one of those "El Otro Lado" goes for nearly forty pages of this fairly short collection. "El Otro Lado" tells the story of a trip back to the Dominican Republic, beginning at an "Artist Colony" where she wants to end her writers' block, and then spending the bulk of the poem in the poor fishing village of Boca. Alvarez comes out of Boca with greater understanding of her identity and her relationship to the world around her. This poem had some fantastic sections, like section eighteen, which narrates a young boy begging this monied stranger for alms. Here is a piece of it:
"Un peso, un peso, un peso,"
no coaxing, no sob story,
the need obvious,
his sugar-sack shift peeled
over a skinny shoulder,
his nose running.

I peel off my glasses,
look him in the eye.
"Give me peace," I say
in a voice as plaintive as his,
"Peace, please."
He stops, the needle lifting
from its grooce
as he goes back over his few years,
recollecting
if this has ever happened before?
The tables turned--
the patrona begging him back!
But it also contains some of the weakest sections of the book. Alvarez's poetry often is in a very soft free verse, the rhythm and music there, but rolling and bubbling gently at the surface--once in a while, she loses control of her words just enough for the poetry to slip back down to the bottom, leaving only clear, strong prose telling a beautiful story. Often these bits last only for a few lines withing an otherwise strong poem or section and so are difficult to find, but they showed up more than once or twice in "El Otro Lado".

I thought the weakest section was "The Gladys Poems", about her early childhood in the Dominican Republic; the poems of immigration and exile (particularly "Sound Bites" and "Between Dominica and Ecuador") of "Making Up the Past" and the narrative captured in "The Joe Poems" were more musical, although all three contributed to the comprehensive image of exile and the slow discovery of home and adult identity.
El Otro Lado is best encapsulated by the fabulous first poem "Bilingual Sestina" (one of my four favorite poems), which captures the push and pull of both languages and thus both homes, in which Alvarez has lived.
Profile Image for Sharon.
40 reviews10 followers
May 24, 2012
On my mind, Alvarez is one of the queens in Latina literature. Love her poetry, prose and fiction. As I am learning the Spanish language, reading poetry and listening to music in the language helps it 'stick'.
Profile Image for Jen.
545 reviews3 followers
February 13, 2021
Super beautiful poems; many seem like prose poems. The people she is writing about are present and real. There is an attention to social class that complicates the duality of Spanish/English, DR/USA.
Profile Image for Nichole Hollingsworth.
346 reviews5 followers
March 22, 2019
While I normally enjoy Julia Alvarez, I didnt enjoy this book of poems as much as I had hoped. Several were hard to follow or understand. A few I did enjoy and she does have a way with writing the awkward tenderness of new live.
Profile Image for Betty.
40 reviews7 followers
August 6, 2008
julia alvarez always comes through. most of her poetry was more like short stories or vinettes. but love love love her writing.
Profile Image for Micahlibris.
83 reviews3 followers
February 26, 2014
A beautiful work, but her transitions are a tad jarring. I had a hard time deciding whether this was a work of prose fiction or poetry. That may be the kind of tension that makes it great however.
Profile Image for Bibliomama.
421 reviews9 followers
February 9, 2018
I enjoyed The Gladys Poems and Making Up the Past. Other sections not so much.
Profile Image for Rita.
1,715 reviews
February 11, 2021
1995
This is a book of poetry, though of unusual form.
The longest is "The Other Side", 40 pages.
I am not into poetry, though this longer one was enough to give me a story.
This longer one, and some of the others, are written in long unrhymed lines.
No obvious rhythm/cadence though perhaps the lines do average about 6 stressed syllables.
In any case, I rather liked the text written in these lines that were each approximately a clause long; the separate lines force me to read a lot more slowly, and thus give me time to let the line sink in.
If it had been typeset as running prose, I would have sailed through the text and not stopped anywhere, I think.

As to the subject matter, it seems the narrator is Dominican by birth, with family still living in the Dominican capital, who has immigrated to the US [New York??] but is currently on a 3-month writer-in-residence program in her home country. Writer's block is mentioned.

The poems in the book are grouped sort of by topic, but taken as a whole do not for me form a coherent something. [I guess I'm wondering if this collection is an attempt to get out of an actual existing writer's block by going ahead and publishing something that doesn't cohere.]. There is quite a bit about feelings related to immigrant life, responses to that, and in the longer set the impressions of and responses to a temporarily returning immigrant.

It's just better for me to stick to fiction!
Profile Image for Mari.
72 reviews
February 13, 2024
I have a huge heart for all the Latina Chicana writers before me. She brings to life the people that were part of her life. Opening the door and welcoming the reader into the worlds she once belonged and belongs in. Shares her struggles and plights that one can relate whether a woman and specifically if marginalized or not considered a guest at various tables. she shares her time of privilege and her time of breaking the glass ceiling. One poem stands alone as her pilgrimage going through assimilation and in proving herself to others in the literary cannon of her skills. Worth the read, you will gain much and be inspired to write of your own personal stories in poetic form.
Profile Image for Katie.
1,357 reviews2 followers
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May 27, 2024
Another potential book for one of our new IB classes. I loved the poems and the way that the collection was organized. I don't know which ones the teacher is planning on using. At about a third of the way through the book, the book shifts into a more adult tone. Alvarez writes about love and her return to the Dominican Republic. Alvarez effectively writes about that sense of both belonging and being an outsider as she tries to figure out where to take her life (and with whom).
151 reviews1 follower
January 26, 2026
Recommended by a friend and I too would highly recommend this book since I enjoyed it very much. Such an amazing author; how she sees things and pens them is mind boggling to me. A portion on page 116 really stood out for me…
‘Worthy causes sounded the call -the best headed for the front lines
But I hung back, unsure, if this was the thing I’d die for,
And so perhaps never found what it was I would live for.”
Profile Image for Jemmie.
171 reviews4 followers
December 3, 2022
Alvarez details an early childhood in the Dominican Republic followed by an awkward fleeing to her new American life. She often describes a splitting of self between the two places that manifests painfully in her daily life. This autobiographical poetry collection paints a layered portrait of a fascinating artist.
Profile Image for Dezi Lewis.
45 reviews
May 10, 2022
I started out enjoying this book but somewhere along the line, it turned into a bit of a mess for me. The stanzas because paragraphs, the poems more like short stories. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, it just didn’t work for me.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
254 reviews4 followers
January 18, 2023
It's reassuring and saddening that being a woman on her own has always been this challenge (and gift?) of endless self discovery.
82 reviews2 followers
April 21, 2023
Alvarez details an early childhood in the Dominican Republic followed by an awkward fleeing to her new American life. She describes a splitting of self between the 2 places that manifests painfully.
Profile Image for Carrie Cantalupo-Sharp.
501 reviews2 followers
October 1, 2023
I loved this book. Especially the Joe poems.
V - I skimmed. Did not hold my interest.
But, I am a devoted Alvarez fan!
Profile Image for Caroline Laverick.
72 reviews1 follower
April 8, 2025
i’m REALLY trying to like poetry so the fact that this gets 3 stars is significant—- if you like poetry you’ll love this but i just kept thinking how awesome it would be as a novel
Profile Image for Kristine Thurston.
146 reviews5 followers
May 8, 2025
I feel like these poems underlie her later novels. Alvarez was a poet first. I especially loved the long last section of linked prose poems.
Profile Image for nebula.
43 reviews
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December 3, 2025
ngl some of the poetry was good but I didn't really think it fit the theme that I was expecting
Profile Image for Wendy Taylor.
11 reviews
April 27, 2010
I'd forgotten how delicious this Mangú’ of a book was. Well worth the second look I gave it.
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews