Family Sentence: The Search for My Cuban-Revolutionary, Prison-Yard, Mythic-Hero, Deadbeat Dad
Books / Hardcover
Books › Biography & Autobiography › Cultural Heritage
ISBN: 0807000388 / Publisher: Beacon Press, October 2009
The daughter of a former Cuban revolutionary turned anti-Castro militant and an Irish-American mother shares childhood memories of meeting her imprisioned father for the first time at the age of six and recounts stories about growing up in Philadelphia and spending summers in Florida's Little Havana with her spanish-speaking relatives.
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Jeanine Cornillot was just two years old when her father, a former Cuban revolutionary turned anti-Castro militant, was sentenced to thirty years in a Florida prison for political bombings. Although he was physically absent throughout her childhood, his presence loomed large in her and her brothers’ imaginations. Keeping his incarceration secret outside the family, each child conjured a different father, yet all believed in his mythic stature as a hero. Jeanine’s Irish-American mother struggled to support the family on her own in suburban Philadelphia and send her kids to a school where the nuns questioned her ability to raise four children without a father. Summers, she put Jeanine on a plane to Little Havana, where she lived with her Spanish-speaking grandparents and bilingual cousin—a sometimes unreliable translator. It was there in Florida that she met her father face to face, in the prison yards. As Cornillot travels between these two worlds, a wryly funny and unsentimental narrator emerges. Whether meeting her father for the first time at age six and hoping she looks Cuban enough, imagining herself a girl-revolutionary leading protest marches, dreamily planning her father’s homecoming after his prison break, or writing to demand an end to his forty-four-day hunger strike after he’s recaptured, young Jeanine maintains a hopeful pragmatism that belies her age. Eventually, a child’s mythology is replaced with an adult’s reality in a final reckoning with her father, remarkable for the unsparing honesty on both sides.
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