The Day

Isabelle Allende’s ‘Violeta’ is an epic South American tale

- By ANITA SNOW

Chilean writer Isabel Allende's latest novel is “Violeta,” an epic tale that transports readers across a century of South American history, through economic collapse, dictatorsh­ip and natural disasters like an earthquake and a hurricane.

From the aftermath of World War I to the present day, narrator Violeta del Valle recounts the story of her life in an unnamed South American country with a book-long letter to her grandson Camilo.

Violeta tells of living through the Spanish flu pandemic as the youngest child and only daughter in a family of five sons. After her father loses everything in the Great Depression, the family must relinquish their comfort in an old mansion in the nation's capital and adopt a more modest life in the country's rural south.

“Violeta” recalls Allende's best known and highly successful novel, “The House of Spirits,” which weaves together the personal and the political in a saga stretching across decades.

“Violeta” also details the horrors of the 1970s dictatorsh­ips in South America, which saw tens of thousands of suspected political opponents kidnapped, tortured and killed, often through Operation Condor, a U.S.-backed alliance among the region's right-wing military government­s.

“The government was committing atrocities, but you could walk down the street and sleep soundly at night without worrying about common criminals,” Violeta writes of those repressive times.

Violeta's son is a journalist who seeks exile, first in Argentina, then in Norway after learning he is on the dictatorsh­ip's black list.

Violeta suspects her son's father of involvemen­t in the repression through his work as a pilot. Much of the book involves Violeta's long, passionate, but troubled relationsh­ip with her son's father following a short, unsatisfyi­ng marriage. Ultimately, she obtains contentmen­t late in life with a retired diplomat and naturalist.

Considered the world's most widely read Spanish-language author, Allende is known for her many novels including “Eva Luna,” “Of Love and Shadows” and “A Long Petal of the Sea,” as well as nonfiction books such as “Paula,” a 1994 memoir.

Allende left Chile for exile two years after Salvador Allende, her father's first cousin, was overthrown in a 1973 coup. Isabel Allende lived for years in Venezuela before settling in the United States.

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By Isabel Allende Random House
Violeta By Isabel Allende Random House

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