Minnesota Public Radio
MPR Home | News | Music | Your Voice | Programs | Support MPR | Around MPR | Search | E-mail

Search MPR Books:

AS HEARD ON
MPR's All Things Considered,
July 24, 2003
LISTEN

READING
July 24, 2003
LISTEN

RELATED LINKS
"Hijuelos sings fresh tune": The Houston Chronicle reviews A Simple Habane Melody.

Oscar Hijuelos Official Web Page: From HarperCollins.

 

More All Things Considered books

A Simple Habana MelodyA Simple Habana Melody
By Oscar Hijuelos
HarperCollins, 2002

(From the publisher) It is 1947 and Israel Levis, a Cuban composer whose life had once been a dream of music, love and sadness, is returning to Habana, Cuba, from Spain, where he has just recovered from the physical and spiritual malaise resulting from his experiences in Paris, then Buchenwald, during the Nazi occupation of France. (A devout Catholic, Levis had been mistakenly identified as a Jew because of his name.)

When Levis arrives back in Habana, after an absence of many years, his mind is reeling with beautiful memories of his life in Cuba and in Paris before the war, a life of pleasure and excitement that he owes, in part, to an unrequited, nearly "chivalrous" romance with a certain Rita Valladares, a singer for whom Levis had written his most famous song, "Rosas Puras," or "Pretty Roses." This 1928 composition becomes the most famous rumba in the world and changes both American and European tastes in music and dance—forever; and it is the song, symbolic of the composer's love for Rita Valladares, that sets Levis's life in Europe in motion.

This is at once a love story—for art, family and country—as well as a portrait of Habana at the turn of the last century, when "the world was good."

About the author
Oscar Hijuelos
© Dario Acosta
(From the publisher) Oscar Hijuelos was born of Cuban parentage in New York City in 1951. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, among others. His five previous novels have been translated into 25 languages.

Minnesota Public Radio
MPR Home | News | Music | Your Voice | Programs | Support MPR | Around MPR | Search | E-mail
©2004 Minnesota Public Radio |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy