Download Free Waiting On Zapote Street Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Waiting On Zapote Street and write the review.

Rio and Laura, two people from opposite backgrounds, meet in Havana, Cuba in January, 1961. A single, unselfish decision to help a stranger shatters their lives. The revolution they unwittingly helped solidify creates a powerful and myopic socialist government that tears them apart. Neither one of them is prepared to face the roller-coaster ride their lives become. Neither one of them could have imagined how much their love for each other would be tested, or for how long, or the impact their choices would have on their families.
Winner of the Latino Books Into Movies Award, Drama TV Series category, an award chaired by Edward James Olmos.As the winds of revolution blow through Cuba, Laura Ocampo, a restless university student, defies her upbringing and becomes a supporter of Fidel Castro's rebels. When the hated Batista flees the country, she joins the thousands pouring into the streets to cheer as the bearded rebels, in the backs of trucks, roll into Havana in victory.Laura finds true love with a handsome revolutionary named Rio, and despite her family's pleas, they marry and start a family. But as the government becomes repressive, then brutal, she convinces Rio to leave Cuba while he still can. She plans to follow with their children, but a cruel twist of fate prevents their escape. As the country deteriorates, Laura must fight to protect and provide for her children while continuing to seek a way out. Separated by world politics and the communist regime, Rio and Laura are forced into things they had never imagined--including Santeria and organized crime--in order to survive. The one last chance to reunite their family will be greatest test of courage Laura has ever faced.3rd column, first page.What are people saying about this novel?"From its opening shocks of loss and separation to its thrilling and emotional conclusion, Waiting on Zapote Street gives us a front-row experience of a Cuban family's hardship, love, and enduring love." John Henry Fleming, author and University of South Florida Creative Writing professor."This touching narrative depicts the harrowing trials, loss and separation that hit one particular family in Cuba when Castro comes to power...The author demonstrates numerous layers of Cuban life and belief..." Judge, 25th Annual Writer's Digest Self-Public Book Awards."We were captivated by this intimate portrayal of the impact of "la revolución." United Nations (UN) Women Book Club of Gulf Coast."The story will take the reader on a rollercoaster ride filled with love and also anger that will test your emotions... It is definitely one of the best books I've read." The Latino Author.
Vivid and engaging short stories and an assortment of poems, most set on the location of the author's first and successful novel, "Waiting on Zapote Street," a book that continues to expand its international appeal. "Candela's Secrets and Other Havana Stories" is an eclectic collection of powerful stories with unexpected and impressive endings. In it, readers step into the streets of Havana and take a front seat to life in Cuba, particularly in the 1970s and 1980s. From each opening line, readers will become emotionally involved with its characters. "When Adela walked down Havana's Zapote Street with her short skirts and wavy black hair bouncing over her shoulders, men stared and women rolled their eyes."
After midnight, loud knocks on the door awake the family. "Hurry up and don't take any of your belongings!" one of the two armed guards shouts at Laura and her three children. Rio, Laura's husband, is waiting for them at the Port of Mariel in Havana to take them to the United States. Berta's family is not part of the group. It is April 1980. The sisters have been inseparable, both living in a house on Zapote Street in Havana. But Berta understands it is time for Laura to find happiness, to reunite with Rio after the Cuban government kept her separated from him for twelve years. It is time for Laura's children to have their father back. But Berta, her husband Antonio, and their two young daughters are not ready to face the upheaval that follows. Overnight, neighbors and even family members turn into enemies. Berta and Antonio can trust no one. They must do everything possible to make it out alive.
In an entangled exodus to freedom during a nuclear missile crisis, a young boy' s Cuban Huck-Finn-childhood is upended. After a decades-long struggle with identity, he transitions from refugee to “ good” American, returning to his roots for redemption. He left his birthplace during a nuclear missile crisis. As a refugee in a foreign land he struggles to adjust to a new set of life circumstances. The author recollects his childhood in his Cuban barrio from the eyes of a child, and then decades later, from the vantage of a grown adult. From stealing a rowboat and being nearly capsized by a Russian tanker, to befriending an old fisherman who tells him a haunting tale, to being bullied by a neighborhood thug, to cockfights gone wrong, to witnessing the plight of political prisoners during an invasion, to dealing with the injustices of growing up in a machismo and homophobic culture, he led a Cuban Huck Finn childhood. Arriving in a foreign land which is at times unwelcoming, he struggles to assimilate while preserving his native soul. Eventually he finds redemption upon circling back to his roots when he returns to the island.
From the author of the award-winning "Waiting on Zapote Street." Rio reunites with his wife, Laura, and their children in the United States after a forced separation that lasted eleven years. However, they are no longer the people they once were. How to reconstitute the family when time has changed them so much? The daughters are now teenagers, and the son is eleven. Rio has a dark past that Laura is just starting to uncover. None of them are prepared to face the obstacles that stand in their way.
From the author of the award-winning "Waiting on Zapote Street" comes a story based on true events. In 1960's central Cuba, a young middle-class woman's life is interrupted as she finds herself a victim in what will quickly become a hurricane of world politics and idealistic dogma. "Betty Viamontes's books are not intended to be classic literature. Instead they are deliberately simple, about real people caught in an historical cataclysm. Like most holocaust memoirs, their strength lies in their simplicity. Ms. Viamontes tells a simple story of normal people, allowing the reader's imagination to fill in the detail. The result stays with you, long after the final virtual page is turned." Dr. Allen Witt.
By the author of the award-winning book "Waiting on Zapote Street," another epic saga that will take readers into an unforgettable journey. When Rodolfo Hernandez's mother forces him to leave Cuba alone, nine years after Fidel Castro comes to power, he doesn't suspect the twists and turns his life would take. But nothing could prepare him for his encounter with his uncle Arturo in Miami, a man who seemed to care little about Rodolfo and anyone else around him, a troubled man with a secret past who would take him years to understand. When Rodolfo begins the twelfth grade at Miami High School, he meets Lissy, a girl with geeky glasses who offers to help him assimilate into a new culture and master a new language. As Rodolfo struggles to understand his uncle, tries to comprehend the changes occurring within the United States as a result of the Vietnam War, and deals with unforeseen events that his parents are facing in Cuba, he fails to understand Lissy and her motivation to help him, a mistake he recognizes when it is almost too late.Havana: A Son's Journey Home also explores the question: Where is home? Is it where we are born, or where our dreams come true? It is a novel that will take readers on an engaging historical adventure that will make them laugh and cry.
In 1961, brothers Angel and Roberto-ages fifteen and twelve-become part of the Pedro Pan Operation, the biggest recorded exodus to the United States of unaccompanied children in the Western Hemisphere. They glimpse at what they are about to experience when their aunt, Marina, begs a stranger to take her infant son out of Cuba to save him from the new authoritarian government. Moments later, Mirta and Fausto, the boys' parents, tearily hug and kiss them goodbye. The boys believe that in about six months, they will see their parents again. However, their lives will be forever altered.
Since Joel Camacho was a child, he knew he didn't want to stay in Cuba. Becoming a medical doctor turns into his ticket out. But it also propels him into an elaborate labyrinth of modern-day slavery, gangs, corruption, and international human trafficking from which he must escape. For him, there is only one haven. Trying to reach it becomes the most difficult challenge of his life. *** Despite the horrors, Crossing North is ultimately a tale of love and family. Its characters are strikingly familiar. They are parents and children like our own, clinging to each other while their world falls apart. Their lives, struggles, and deaths are a lesson and a caution for the modern world. Allen A. Witt PhD, Lead Author of America's Community College: The First Century *** About the author: Betty Viamontes was born in Havana, Cuba. At age fifteen, Betty and her family crossed the Florida Straits in an overcrowded shrimp boat on a stormy night when many families perished. This trip would reunite the family with Betty's father in the United States after almost twelve years of separation. Upon the death of her mother and Betty's completion of graduate studies at the University of South Florida, to honor her mother, Betty has dedicated her life to capturing the stories of people without a voice. Her stories have traveled the world, from the award-winning novels Waiting on Zapote Street and Brothers: A Pedro Pan Story to the No. 1 new releases The Girl from White Creek and A Girl Named Polina.