ISBN: 1-931010-16-1
144 pp. | paper only | $13.00
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Coming
in October!
fiction by Reinaldo Bragado Bretaña; translated by David
William Foster
Night
Watch
is David William Fosters translation of La
noche vigilada, the story of a Cuban writer who has lived
all his life under the oppressive Castro regime. Having gone to
great lengths to hide his writings, he longs for artistic freedom.
He wanders in the streets of Havana at night and eventually becomes
involved with a woman he meets at a café. After a frightening
brush with the police in a raid on the café in search of
dissidents, the woman and two of her friends persuade him to travel
on a raft to the United States. Once in Miami, he becomes part of
a large community of exiles as he attempts to adjust to a lifestyle
vastly different from what he has known previously.
Reinaldo Bragado Bretaña was born in Havana, Cuba,
where he worked as a high school teacher of history. In 1977, while
attempting to flee the country, he was arrested and sentenced to
two years in prison. In 1981 he was released, and in 1988 the Castro
regime expelled him and he moved to the United States. He now works
as a freelance writer and a commentator on Radio Martí and
Radio Nacional de Colombia.
David William Foster is Regents Professor of Spanish
at Arizona State University. His most recent publication is Violence
in Argentine Literature: Cultural Responses to Tyranny (University
of Missouri Press, 1995). He is also the editor of Sexual Textualities:
Essays on Queer/ing Latin American Writing (University of Texas
Press, 1997).
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