San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Sacrifice, survival at heart of ‘The Wind Knows My Name’

- By Anita Snow

Prolific Latin American-born author Isabel Allende skillfully braids the traumatic stories of two young children separated from each other by decades and thousands of miles in her latest novel, “The Wind Knows My Name.”

It’s a kind of homage to parents who make unthinkabl­e decisions to save their little ones and to kids who survive some of the toughest challenges imaginable.

One fictional child featured in the book is 5-yearold Samuel Adler, whose father disappeare­d after the 1938 pogrom in Vienna known as Kristallna­cht, or the Night of Broken Glass. The other is 7-year-old Anita Diaz, who fled her native El Salvador with her mother only for the pair to be separated in 2019 at the Arizona-Mexico border.

In both cases, the children are traveling by train and are ultimately left alone, torn from their families by war or immigratio­n, as we witness the dramatic sacrifices parents sometimes must make to protect their sons and daughters and give them the best lives possible.

Allende moves the story back and forth between Europe and the United States, switches between the past and present, as two very different children in very different places and circumstan­ces search for the safety of home and family.

It’s a very different kind of book for Allende, who often places her stories in her native Latin America, including her best known and highly successful novel “The House of Spirits” and last year’s “Violeta,” which stretches across a century of South American history.

Early on in this latest novel, a Nazi mob attacks the Jewish neighborho­od where Samuel lives with his parents. Afterward the father turns up in a hospital but then is taken to a concentrat­ion camp, and the mother sends the boy to safety in England. Samuel never sees his parents again.

Decades later on the U.S.Mexico

border, Anita Diaz, 7, is separated from her mother under the U.S. government’s previous no tolerance policy that tore child migrants from their parents. The little girl is sent to live in a group home for children, while her mother’s whereabout­s are unknown.

Through a series of circumstan­ces, Samuel and Anita eventually meet through Leticia, a Salvadoran woman who migrated to the U.S. as a child herself after losing most of her family in the infamous 1981 massacre of hundreds of villagers in El Mozote, El Salvador.

Allende knows firsthand about the loss of homeland

after leaving Chile for exile two years after Salvador Allende, her father’s first cousin, was overthrown as the country’s president in a 1973 coup.

She lived for years in Venezuela before settling in the United States and now calls California home.

Considered the world’s most widely read Spanishlan­guage author, Allende is known for her many novels, including “Eva Luna,” “Of Love and Shadows“and “A Long Petal of the Sea.” She also wrote “Paula,” a 1994 memoir.

With “The Wind Knows My Name,” Allende has added a new dimension to her already varied works.

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 ?? Eric Risberg/Associated Press ?? Author Isabel Allende’s latest book, “The Wind Knows My Name,” explores the lives of two children alone and adrift.
Eric Risberg/Associated Press Author Isabel Allende’s latest book, “The Wind Knows My Name,” explores the lives of two children alone and adrift.

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