Review: Of Women And Salt

REVIEW: OF WOMEN AND SALT

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Of Women and Salt by Gabriela Garcia is a debut novel that takes an introspective look at generational trauma. Inviting the reader with strong descriptions and striking imagery, there was no escaping the sorrow that was written throughout the pages. -- The story takes a focus on Jeanette who is a Cuban-American recovering addict. We see several stages of Jeanette’s life as she suffers and battles through her addiction. However in the midst of this journey, we discover how each generation that has come before her has played a role in her overall development. Whether the political unrest in Cuba that started with her 3x great grandmother Maria Isabel; to the domestic abuse and violence that has long played a role in the women’s lives, we see how trauma trickles down from one woman to the next, passing along dead dreams with unspoken pain and fear. 

Garcia does a powerful job at outlining Cuban history and displaying Cuban culture and sentiments. Though, what I found most interesting was how she wove the subject of immigration, into the plotline, by adding a subsequent storyline focusing on Gloria and Ana – mother and child who emigrated from El Salvador. She painted such a vivid heartbreaking picture of detention centers; delineating the many flaws in a system that is built to fail those who need it the most. It makes you question how can something so broken still exist in an era where so much seems to be possible? She then took it a step further by bringing in racism into the picture; giving us a portrait of how different immigration can look like depending on the color of your skin. Garcia did not hold back. 

This is not intended to be a light read, but instead meant to challenge your thoughts.

You are left wondering about the outcomes of many of the characters presented throughout the book and it could feel somewhat glass half full. However, as the reader I felt as though they were characters meant to help connect experiences, between the women, while also allowing the reader to gain more understanding of Jeannette’s storyline. 

This is a story about culture but also of the pain that lies between mother, daughter and the legacies that are never too far behind. You will be left with profound thoughts that will pull at your heart, but most importantly your soul. 

-- Tiffany Gonzalez


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Gabriela Garcia is the author of the novel Of Women and Salt, forthcoming from Flatiron (US), Picador (UK), and in eight other languages. Her fiction and poems have appeared in Best American Poetry, Tin House, Zyzzyva, Iowa Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, The Cincinnati Review, Black Warrior Review, and elsewhere. She received a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writer’s Award, a Steinbeck Fellowship, and residencies and fellowships from Breadloaf, Sarabande Books, Lighthouse Works, the Keller Estate, and the Community of Writers at Squaw Valley. She has a BA in Sociology from Fordham University and an MFA in fiction from Purdue University, where she also taught creative writing. 

The daughter of immigrants from Cuba and Mexico, Gabriela was raised in Miami and currently lives in the Bay Area. She is a long-time feminist and migrant justice organizer who has also worked in music and magazines.


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Tiffany Gonzalez earned a Bachelors of Arts in Journalism and Media Studies and obtained her Masters in Communication and Media from Rutgers University – NB. She has worked in the Publishing industry for over 4 years. She currently works for Astra Publishing House as the Marketing and Publicity Coordinator for Astra House. She’s excited to start working with underrepresented stories and bringing them to the hands of all readers. You can follow her on Instagram @wandering_tiff_