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Of Women and Salt

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About this listen

The New York Times Bestseller
'Extraordinary . . . stunning' Elizabeth Macneal, author of The Doll Factory
'Vivid details, visceral prose and strong willful women' Angie Cruz, author of Dominicana
'Vivid, engrossing, luminous' Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti

Five generations of women, linked by blood and circumstance, by the secrets they share, and by a single book passed down through a family, with an affirmation scrawled in its margins: We are force. We are more than we think we are.

1866, Cuba: María Isabel is the only woman employed at a cigar factory, where each day the workers find strength in daily readings of Victor Hugo. But these are dangerous political times, and as María begins to see marriage and motherhood as her only options, the sounds of war are approaching.

1959, Cuba: Dolores watches her husband make for the mountains in answer to Fidel Castro’s call to arms. What Dolores knows, though, is that to survive, she must win her own war, and commit an act of violence that threatens to destroy her daughter Carmen’s world.

2016, Miami: Carmen, still wrestling with the trauma of displacement, is shocked when her daughter Jeanette announces her plans to travel to Cuba to see her grandmother Dolores. In the walls of her crumbling home lies a secret, one that will link Jeanette to her past, and to this fearless line of women.

From nineteenth-century cigar factories to present-day detention centres, from Cuba to the United States to Mexico, Gabriela Garcia’s Of Women and Salt follows Latina women of fierce pride, bound by the stories passed between them. It is a haunting meditation on the choices of mothers and the tenacity of women who choose to tell their truth despite those who wish to silence them. For fans of American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins and Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardine Evaristo, this audio edition includes a bonus conversation between Gabriela Garcia and Roxane Gay.

Family Life Fiction Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Mental Health Awareness United States Women's Fiction World Literature Latin American Marriage

Critic reviews

Gabriela Garcia captures the lives of Cuban women in a world to which they refuse to surrender and she does so with precision and generosity and beauty (Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist)
I am a sucker for intergenerational family dramas and fraught mother and daughter relationships. Garcia's vivid details, visceral prose and strong willful women negotiating how to survive in this world are easy to fall for (Angie Cruz, author of Dominicana)
Extraordinary. Of Women and Salt is a book that made me fall in love with reading again, that reminded me of the power and devastating effect that words can possess. It is a stunning hymn to the strength of mothers. The last book that made me feel this way was Girl, Woman, Other, written with the same generosity and compassion, its words (so elegant and understated) delivered like blows. I cannot stop thinking about it. (Elizabeth Macneal, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Doll Factory)
I devoured it, and in return it swallowed me whole into the lives of women whose decisions mould and make each other. It’s about mothers & daughters - fierce love and the terror that comes with it. How we save each other. How we save ourselves. (Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Mercies)
This stunningly accomplished first novel is both epic and intimate.
A mesmerizing patchwork of determination, courage and survival.
The women in Garcia's striking debut novel are connected not just by blood but by the need to endure or escape abusive relationships and countries. She captures the hope and pain of immigration and the terror of deportation with an unsentimental yet empathetic eye
A vivid, engrossing novel . . . it utterly absorbed me with its luminous, exacting prose and depictions of redemption and violence (Sharlene Teo, author of Ponti)
A moving intergenerational epic
A sweeping tour de force about addiction, displacement, and the legacy of trauma
Expansive yet intimate . . . this gorgeous debut heralds the arrival of a literary star
Gripping, accomplished . . . an interlocking portrait of women striving, loving, losing, getting lost and getting found
The debut that's had publishing buzzing all winter long meditates on the way immigration shapes the lives of Latinx women
A fierce and powerful debut. Garcia wields narrative power, cultivating true and profound work on migration, legacy, and survival (Terese Marie Mailhot, bestselling author of Heart Berries )
A stunning achievement. I loved its intensity, its scope, its vivid prose. An essential, profound story about mothers and daughters, the Latina Experience, and the indomitable beating heart of womankind. (Emma Stonex, author of The Lamplighters)
All stars
Most relevant
I very much looked forward to reading this novel and I have to confess I was disappointed. Much is explained by listening to the interview with the author at the end, where it’s revealed the book started life as a series of short stories. Each story is told from the perspective of a series of women, but no single woman is allowed to articulate the entirety of her story. I won’t plot spoil - I will just say that one person’s demise is narrated through the mouth of another at a completely different point in time. Very postmodern I hear you cry, and you’re probably right. I would have so loved to have traveled further with any one of the characters rather than have left them in some metaphorical waiting room.

Held such promise

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I nearly DNF this but I am so glad I went back to it because it just got better and better!

Didn't want this to end!

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Loved this audiobook

Women’s voices were their Herstory through struggles and triumphs.

It felt like being inside a realistic fairy tale

Perfectly layered generational Matriarchy

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I found the audiobook initially difficult to get into as I wasn't fond at first of Frankie Corzo's narration. Her tone can be quite monotonous, I found. The story easily draws you in though - it's a fascinating generation-spanning saga told entirely through the viewpoints of women. I loved it and would recommend it.

Generation-spanning saga

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