When it was first published in 1985, Face met with critical acclaim and established Cecile Pineda among the very first Latina writers in the United States to be published by a major New York house. This new expanded edition, which marks the announcement of Face as a 2013 Neustadt Prize finalist, features a foreword by Nobel Prize-winning author J. M. Coetzee and a never-before-published interview with the author conducted by Dr. Francisco Lomel . The novel--based on an actual event--tracks the fortunes of Helio Cara, a poor but brilliant Brazilian man. When he hears that his mother is dying, Helio rushes from his shack in one of Rio de Janeiro's favelas to the local telegraph office, only to fall down a steep hillside and literally lose his face, and in turn his identity. He rapidly loses his job, his lover, and his friends--his neighbor's go so far as to burn down his shack--and flees to the Brazilian interior to live as an outcast in his mother's tiny house. Pineda deftly, hauntingly records Helio Cara's decision to perform self-surgery, using only novocaine, to reconstruct his face and identity. This compelling metaphor for identity, already taught in American and Latino literature courses in numerous universities, stands ready to engross a new generation of readers.
Have You Ever Thought You Couldn't Make it? This Book Is for You!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Helio Cara grew up in a world where nothing can be taken for granted. His dad is killed when he is young, he grew up in a shack and lives in a shanty town surrounding Rio de Janeiro. Then, one day, something happens to him which turns the odds even more against him: A man tells him there is a telegram at the post office, his mother is about to die, he runs down the shanty to the post office, he falls and "looses" his face in a fall from a cliff onto rocks below. He is broke, both physically and financially. No one wants to help him; his mother is dead; he looses his job, his girlfriend; they burn his shack; he moves to his mother's shack in the interior; they try to kill him. Yet, he decides he will try to reconstruct his face by himself. He reads about plastic surgery and scrounges up money from his night-time job (watering trees in an orchard) to buy novocaine. Finally, his break: A doctor experimenting on reconstruction techniques decides he can hospitalize him to finish the work he had begun. He goes back to Rio de Janeiro. He sees his old girlfriend and her new companion on the bus. But he is already a man with a new face, outside and inside. She doesn't recognize him. He moves on. My only critique about this novel is that the decision to rebuild his face, so important to the whole direction of the book, happens in a scant half page. There is no prelude. But the writing is that of a master: Pineda describes situations, details, with true skill, and this was her first book. Truly remarkable.
Unforgettable
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I read this book a long time ago, but where others fade,this remains in my memory. It is a most unusual tale of the triumph of the human spirit. The main character suffers a disfiguring injury which has a profound effect on his life. The steps he takes to re-enter the world are nothing short of amazing. Read it. You won't forget it.
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