BOOKS - The Man Who Could Move Clouds
The Man Who Could Move Clouds - Ingrid Rojas Contreras July 12, 2022 PDF  BOOKS
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The Man Who Could Move Clouds
Author: Ingrid Rojas Contreras
Year: July 12, 2022
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 4.8 MB
Language: English

Listening Length and t10 hours and 58 minutesFrom the author of the critically acclaimed novel Fruit of the Drunken Tree, comes a dazzling, kaleidoscopic memoir reclaiming her family's otherworldly legacy.For Ingrid Rojas Contreras, magic runs in the family. Raised amidst the political violence of 1980s and '90s Colombia, in a house where and "what did you dream? and " was the preferred greeting in place of and "how are you?, and " very little was out of the ordinary. Her maternal grandfather, Nono, was a renowned curandero, a community healer gifted with what the family called and "the secrets: and " the power to talk to the dead, tell the future, treat the sick, and move the clouds. As a young girl Rojas Contreras spent her days eavesdropping on her mother's fortune-telling clients and eagerly waiting for the phone calls from relatives reporting that her mother's apparition had, yet again, visited them thousands of miles away from where Mami stood in the family's kitchen. So when Rojas Contreras, now living in the United States, suffered a head injury in her twenties that left her with amnesia - an accident eerily similar to a fall her mother took as a child, from which she woke not just with amnesia, but also the ability to see ghosts - the family assumed and "the secrets and " had been passed down once again. Spurred by a shared dream among Mami and her sisters, and her own powerful urge to relearn her family history in the aftermath of her memory loss, Rojas Contreras joins her mother on a journey home to Colombia to disinter Nono's remains. With her mother as her unpredictable, stubborn, and often hilarious guide, Rojas Contreras traces her lineage back to her Indigenous and Spanish roots, uncovering the violent and rigid colonial narrative that would eventually break her family into two camps: those who believe and "the secrets and " are a gift, and those who are convinced they are a curse. Interweaving family stories more enchanting than those in any novel, resurrected Colombian history, and her own deeply personal reckonings with the bounds of reality, Rojas Contreras writes her way through the incomprehensible and into her inheritance. The result is a luminous testament to the power of storytelling as a healing art and an invitation to embrace the extraordinary.

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