I Lived on Butterfly Hill, Marjorie Agosin
I Lived on Butterfly Hill, Marjorie Agosin
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

I Lived on Butterfly Hill

Author: Marjorie Agosin

Narrator: Kyla García

Unabridged: 11 hr 31 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/17/2020


Synopsis

Celeste Marconi is a dreamer. She lives peacefully among friends and neighbors and family in the idyllic town of Valparaiso, Chile—until one day when warships are spotted in the harbor and schoolmates start disappearing from class without a word. Celeste doesn't quite know what is happening, but one thing is clear: no one is safe, not anymore.

The country has been taken over by a government that declares artists, protestors, and anyone who helps the needy to be considered "subversive" and dangerous to Chile's future. So Celeste's parents—her educated, generous, kind parents—must go into hiding before they, too, "disappear." Before they do, however, they send Celeste to America to protect her.

As Celeste adapts to her new life in Maine, she never stops dreaming of Chile. But even after democracy is restored to her home country, questions remain: Will her parents reemerge from hiding? Will she ever be truly safe again?

About Marjorie Agosin

Marjorie Agosin is the Pura Belpre Award-winning author of I Lived on Butterfly Hill. She was raised in Chile by Jewish parents. Her family moved to the United States to escape the horrors of the Pinochet takeover of their country. Coming from a South American country and being Jewish, Agosin's writings demonstrate a unique blending of these cultures. She has received the Letras de Oro Prize for her poetry, and her writings about-and humanitarian work for-women in Chile have been the focus of feature articles in the New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, and Ms. magazine. She has also won the Latino Literature Prize for her poetry. She is a Spanish professor at Wellesley College.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ariel

A historical novel about a girl who must flee Chile after the military coup in the 1970s, comes to America, and then returns to her homeland after several years. I have mixed feelings about this novel, which is by an old friend, Marjorie Agosin, who was my Chile advisor on Weavings of War, a textile......more

Goodreads review by Erin

This is a book I think I should have liked more than I did. In some ways, I loved it--the lyrical story based on the author's own experience of growing up in Chile with neighbors she loves and a warm bubbling house with caring parents when there is a political coup. People start disappearing, her pa......more