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Paperback Let Their Spirits Dance Book

ISBN: 0060089482

ISBN13: 9780060089481

Let Their Spirits Dance

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

"Stella Pope Duarte is a writer who will not be stopped. Her story takes its power from a larger love, and the quest here is as pressing as any I've read. This is a novel that looks at a rocky, uncertain time, with the intention of helping. It does." -- Ron Carlson, author of The Hotel Eden and At the Jim Bridge

An inspiring novel about family, the memories of war, and a woman who valiantly rallies herself and those...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great for the spirit

Vietnam stayed bottled up in me until I read this book decades after the war. I had a well of tears that had to come out. The book helped do that. The book is very touching, sweet, and startling. One family's journey to the Wall is a movie in itself and it should become a screen play. I hope people learn from this book. Every elected official should have to read it and those debate moderators ought to ask them if they have read it, especially if they are trying to run for the presidency.

MARAVILLOSA

Recomiendo esta novela a cualquier persona que tenga familiares o amistades que estuvieran en las fuerzas armadas y que hayan fallecido o a personas que les guste novelas llenas de esperanza. Es una novela llena de esperanza, de humor, de conflictos, de comprensión y entendimiento, una novela muy humana. No hay otra palabra que la describa mas que simplemente maravillosa!

Score one for the teacher!!!

Stella Pope Duarte's bio says she is a university instructor and a high school counselor. I'll bet she took a lot of writing and/or literature classes during her school years, because her debut novel is nothing short of a miracle, considering how publishers continue to release poorly constructed, poorly edited books. From the first sentence -- "The passion vine bloomed until late November the year Jesse died." -- until the last paragraph -- ". . . No one knows if a spirit can balance on the point of a pin, or send light beams when we least expect. I looked down at the Wall. Light shone from it like a laser beam reaching us flying overhead. It's OK that I knew my brother wasn't coming home. I was supposed to. It got me to write this book, to tell his story to the world." -- Ms. Duarte's elegant, mystical prose casts a spell on her reader. Duarte weaves the story of a Chicano family torn asunder by the death of its beloved son/brother/cousin Jesse Ramirez during the Viet Name War in 1968. Before he boarded the plane, Jesse promised his mother that she would hear his voice again. When she finally hears his voice one night, some thirty years after his death, she cannot rest until she visits the Viet Nam Memorial Wall to touch his name. Jesse's family has not fared well since his death. One of his sisters, Teresa, is in the middle of a difficult divorce. Another sister can't find Mr. Right, although not from lack of effort. His brother is an ex-con trying to connect with his estranged son. His buddies who returned from the war have had their share of struggles, too. Riding herd on this rag-tag group is Jesse's mother, Alicia Rodriguez. She alone has not lost faith and despite her fragile health and lack of money, she is determined to make the long trek to Washington to see the Wall. I look forward to many, many more books from Stella Pope Durate. She's got all the skills necessary to teach us about quality writing and to entertain us for years to come. Enjoy.

profoundly moving!

Jesse A. Ramirez was killed in action in Viet Nam on June 7, 1968. His mother & sister have learnt to live with their grief.Until that Christmas when Senora Ramirez hears her son's voice. When a letter arrives soon after explaining how the military had made a mistake & now owes the family some serious money, the mourning matriarch becomes inspired. She herds her surviving children & theirs into a convoy of autos, to drive from Pheonix so she can touch her son's name upon the Vietnam Memorial Wall, & know some peace.It is Teresa, the adult sister to whom Jesse often wrote, who tells the story, taking us into her Mexica past where a holy man gives healing & ancient spirits dwell. Where fathers & husbands wander from their marriages. Where sisters squabble & children grow up in the raza barrios of Arizona. Where honor is thwarted, bureaucrats bicker & clues are strewn like petals from a passion flower.As the family sets out into the sunrise, Teresa's nephew creates a website & America joins them on their pilgrimage, gathering up Jesse's army buddies, attracting the attention of the military. & then someone from Little Saigon in California makes contact, & Jesse's spirit finally comes home.RebeccasReads recommends LET THEIR SPIRITS DANCE as profoundly emotional, deeply spiritual & intensely rewarding.

A powerful, important novel

Let Their Spirits Dance introduces both a newcomer to fiction writing and the first novel to address the topic of Latin soldiers during the Vietnam War. A Latino son drafted to Vietnam is killed soon after, and his family never quite succeeds in confronting the meaning of his death. Three decades later a mother will seek to understand, setting in motion events which will change the family. A powerful, important novel.
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