Dec 15, 2009
The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O’Brien | The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O’Brien
At a glance:
- Author: Oscar Hijuelos
- First Published: 1993
- Type of Work: Novel
- Genres: Long fiction, Family literature
- Subjects: Family or family life, North America or North Americans, United States or Americans, Twentieth century, Social life, California, West, U.S., Ethnic groups, Immigration or emigration, Multiculturalism, Photography or photographers, Cuba or Cubans, Intermarriage, Hollywood, Bilingualism, Latinos, Ireland or Irish people, Alaska, Arctic
- Locales: California, New York, Pennsylvania, Cuba, Ireland, Alaska
The opening sentence of Hijuelos's third novel proclaims
that “the house in which the fourteen sisters of Emilio
Montez O’Brien lived radiated femininity.” That
radiation is powerful enough to cause horses to throw their
riders, cars to skid into ditches, and a plane to fall from the
sky. Patriarch Nelson O’Brien senses himself condemned to
solitude in his own crowded home, and his proficiency at
generating daughters perplexes and perturbs him. He rejoices when
his final, fifteenth, child turns out to be a son. For Emilio,
surrounded and coddled by a mother and fourteen...
[The entire page is 966 words long]
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