
A 
              Secret for Julia. Mercedes, imprisoned 
              as a dissident during Argentina's "dirty war," was raped 
              and fled, pregnant, to London. Twenty years later, her torturer 
              reappears. 
This mystery, a psychological coming-of-age tale for her daughter, 
              won the prestigious Premio La Niacin prize. The novel provides a 
              profound, beautiful examination of the effects of a period in Argentina's 
              history 
known for the 30,000 who "disappeared," whose mothers 
              and grandmothers (the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo) refuse to forget. 
              MORE
The Color Purple. 
                Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning classic describes 
                an abused, uneducated black woman's struggle. Celie’s letters 
                tell the story of 20 years of her life. At age 14, she is abused 
                and raped by her father; during her marriage to Mister, a brutal 
                man who terrorizes her, she attempts to protect her sister from 
                the same fate. Celie eventually learns that her husband has been 
                keeping her sister's letters from her; the rage she feels--combined 
                with an example of love and independence provided by her friend 
                Shug --pushes her toward the awakening of her creative, loving 
                self. 
                MORE
Annie 
              John is a haunting, provocative 
              story of a young girl growing up on the island of Antigua. Kincaid’s 
              novel focuses on a universal, tragic, and 
sometimes comic theme: the loss of childhood. Readers will not soon 
              forget Annie’s voice— urgent, demanding to be heard. 
              MORE
Caramelo is the multi-generational story of a Mexican-American family whose 
                voices create a dazzling mix of humor, passion and poignancy. 
                The novel opens with the family’s annual car trip from Chicago 
                to Mexico City. Studs Terkel calls it “A crazy, funny folk 
                saga.” He’s right. 
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The 
                No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency. The first book 
                in Alexander McCall Smith’s engaging series about Mma Ramotswe, 
                founder and owner of Botswana’s only detective agency for 
the “concerns of both ladies and others.”
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The 
              Palace of Tears, Alev Lytle Croutier writes of a man who dreams 
              of a woman while she dreams of him. He leaves his native France 
              to find her in Istanbul. This is a small book, but an epic adventure 
              of the heart, a grown up fairy tale with breathtaking descriptions 
              and spellbinding storytelling. 
              MORE 
        
Interpreter 
              of Maladies. Some of these 9 short stories are set in India, others in the United 
              States. All are about people of Indian heritage but the situations 
              that Jhumpa Lahiri's characters face, from unhappy marriages to civil war, transcend ethnicity. They will resonant for everyone who has grown up, left home, fallen in or out of love, and, above all, experienced what it means to be a foreigner, even within one's own family.
MORE
Green 
              Cane and Juicy Flotsam: Short Stories by Caribbean Women. 
              Women from Trinidad, Jamaica, Haiti, Cuba, The Dominican Republic, 
              Surinam, Puerto Rico, Antigua, Guadeloupe and 
Dominica tell 27 stories that are poetically written (and translated) 
              yet sword-sharp with anger at being born victims thanks to their 
              sex, race and class. Some of these talented writers are unknown 
              outside their countries.
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Caetana’s 
              Sweet Song. Set in 1970 in a small provincial town in 
              Brazilian, Polidoro, a wealthy cattle baron, grants his aging former 
              mistress her heart's desire, just as he promised when they were 
              young lovers. Caetana wants to be Maria Callas for one night; Polidoro, 
              still smitten, sets out to provide her with a theater and an audience 
              while his wife does everything possible to sabotage her rival's 
              performance. 
      MORE.
The 
                God of Small Things. To quote the USA Today review: 
                “Offers such magic, mystery and sadness that, literally, 
                this reader turned the last page and decided to reread it. Immediately. 
                It’s that hauntingly wonderful.”
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Namako/Sea 
                Cucumber. Linda Watanabe McFerrin writes, “I 
                came at last to namako, a word that in the Japanese combination 
                of characters means both ‘sea cucumber’ and “raw 
                child,’ a symbol for the simplicity and vulnerability that 
                I feel is at the root of the Japanese and perhaps all psyches.”
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© Paola Gianturco 2007-2010 All Rights Reserved