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The Mapmaker's Opera
The Mapmaker's Opera
Author: Bea Gonzalez
When artist Diego Clemente moves from Seville to the Yucatan Peninsula to help complete the first guide to the region's birds, he arrives on the eve of the Mexican Revolution, cicra 1910. It is a place where the precarious and the beautiful balance each other, where opulence is built on the backs of slaves and the social order is on the brink o...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780006392644
ISBN-10: 0006392644
Publication Date: 2006
Pages: 277
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Publisher: Harper Perennial
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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reviewed The Mapmaker's Opera on + 407 more book reviews
This was a beautifully told story about birds, love and people on the eve of revolution. I liked the opera theme throughout as characters entered the scene from stage right or left.
grinloch avatar reviewed The Mapmaker's Opera on + 7 more book reviews
Colorful, exotic birds enrapture the protagonists of this lyrical early 20th-century love story about the life of bird lover, artist and mapmaker Diego Clemente. As soon as Diego, the adoptive son of a Spanish bookseller, first comes across John James Audubon's hand-colored Birds of America, he is smitten with ornithology. When the opportunity to travel to the Yucatán to work with American scientist and author Edward Nelson presents itself, Diego promptly signs up and, once in Mexico, falls in love with his free-spirited, bird-enthusiast female counterpart, Sophia Duarte. Despite Sophia's meddlesome relatives and bumbling would-be suitor, Sophia and Diego bond. With revolutionary rumblings in the background, things come to a tense head when a workers' uprising threatens two of the world's only remaining passenger pigeons, which are being held by a greedy local plantation owner. The book comes to a tragic close that still manages to hold out a glimmer of hope. Rich descriptions of Seville and Mexico aid in creating a believable tale of romance and revolution.


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