The Columbus Dispatch

Camila Cabello celebrates grandmothe­r’s novel and her strength

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MALAGA, Spain – Camila Cabello credits the strong women in her life for her success as an artist and a person. So it was only natural that she was there to celebrate her grandmothe­r’s milestone – the publicatio­n of a novel.

The Spanish-language book, “Los boleros que he vivido” (“The Boleros that I Have Lived”), has been a decadeslon­g dream project of Cabello’s grandmothe­r, Mercedes Rodriguez.

The “Havana” singer traveled last week to Málaga, Spain, to celebrate and help promote Rodriguez’s book, which tells the story of a woman who separates from her husband after many years of marriage. The story across its 329 pages weaves through the woman’s efforts to reunite with her daughter and granddaugh­ters in the U.S. – a tale that mirrors events in the lives of Cabello’s family.

“In the end I finished it very quickly, really, very quickly, because it’s the story

of my life and I still have a good memory,” Rodriguez said.

As Rodriguez, 75, discussed the novel, Cabello held her hand. “My family is such a huge part of who I am, it’s such a big part of who I am as an artist, it’s such a big part of my music,” Cabello said.

Music is like a character throughout the novel – every chapter is named after a bolero, the music genre of romantic

lyrics originated in Cuba that became very popular in the first half of the 20th century throughout Latin America. For Rodriguez, music is essential: “It is something that no human being can stop living with in order to be happy,” she said.

Of her granddaugh­ter’s success, Rodriguez said, “It’s in her blood, she has photos at 2-years-old with a microphone in her hand and with the radio on.

“I hear her sing at a concert, for example, and I even get breathless, it excites me so much, I just can’t explain it to you,” She said. “It’s something I’ve never felt in my life, seeing her on stage singing or hearing a record of her.”

Rodriguez’s favorite Cabello song, “Never Be the Same,” stirs up intense emotions. “I can’t hear it because I make a fool of myself, I immediatel­y start crying,” she said.

Other family favorites include music of their native Cuba, as well as Latin pop stars as Alejandro Sanz or Luis Miguel, and a superstar favored by Cabello’s grandmothe­r: Ed Sheeran.

Cabello said that she feels a special bond with the women of her family, a lineage that stretches back to her grandma’s grandmothe­r, who Rodriguez called Isabelita.

“I feel like I wouldn’t be like who I am today if it weren’t for the fact that my family has such strong women. All women who have had strong personalit­ies and who have done things their way,” she said, citing how the her great grandmothe­r was “thinking really ahead of her time in terms of sexuality and relationsh­ips.” (Cabello notes it’s a theme her grandmothe­r explores in “Los boleros que he vivido.”)

“My mom has always been the same way, she,” Cabello said, referencin­g Rodriguez, “has always been the same way, my sister, who’s 15, is somebody like that too. Very independen­t thinkers.”

 ?? AP ?? Cuban-born American singer and songwriter Camila Cabello, right, poses with her grandmothe­r, Mercedes Rodriguez, recently in Malaga, Spain.
AP Cuban-born American singer and songwriter Camila Cabello, right, poses with her grandmothe­r, Mercedes Rodriguez, recently in Malaga, Spain.

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