An archive of Elizabeth’s posts can be found HERE.
Elizabeth Huergo was born in Havana and immigrated to the United States at an early age as a political refugee. A published poet and story writer, she lives in Virginia. The Death of Fidel Perez is her first novel. A little about the book from Publishers Weekly:
Havana-born first-time novelist Huergo’s clever political satire uses an intriguing premise to depict what could happen to her native country if Fidel and Raúl Castro suddenly died. On July 26, 2003, the drunken and heartbroken thief Fidel Pérez tumbles from the upstairs balcony of his younger brother Rafael’s flat in Havana. While attempting to rescue Fidel, Rafael also slips, and both brothers plunge to their deaths. The excited bystanders shout “Fidel and his brother have fallen,” giving rise to a quickly spreading rumor. Homeless bag lady Saturnina Diaz seizes on the rallying cry as she envisions her son Tomás, a university student killed during the 1959 revolution, returning to life. Also swept up in the furor are elderly history professor Pedro Valle and his student, 27-year-old taxi driver Camilo Santos. As the new dissident movement picks up steam, readers glimpse the past history of bloody Cuban revolutions in Pedro’s ruminations and dialogues with the ghost of his friend Mario, with whom he was tortured by the government. The revolution to oust the old-guard Castro regime imagined in Huergo’s intricate novel might be foretelling Cuba’s future.
[Read an excerpt of the book HERE, via The Latina Book Club.]
You can learn more about Elizabeth on her website, and by following her on Twitter.