University of Texas Press
The House on the Beach
The House on the Beach
Couldn't load pickup availability
Like waves ebbing and flowing, love surges and subsides among four friends who share a vacation at the house on the beach. As they navigate the seas of love and friendship, jealousy and unfaithfulness, Elena, Marta, Eduardo, and Rafael are swept up in the opposing currents that flow between security and personal freedom, marriage and sexual liberation, family and work, provincial and city life, and traditional and unconventional gender roles.
This deceptively simple novel, published in Mexico in 1966 as La casa en la playa and here translated into English for the first time, is an important work by one of Mexico's, and indeed Latin America's, major writers of the twentieth century. Juan García Ponce helped Mexican arts and letters break out of the ossified styles and themes of the post-Revolutionary "Mexican School" with works that explore the conflict between individual desire and the demands of family and work. Written at a turning point in his career, The House on the Beach foreshadows his embrace of the erotic encounter as a means of undermining rigid, socially constructed personal identity. It supports feminist views and probes deeply into the contradictions, backwardness, and progress of modern Mexican society.
Author: Juan García Ponce
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Published: 08/01/1994
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.81lbs
Size: 9.01h x 6.04w x 0.61d
ISBN: 9780292727649
Review Citation(s):
Publishers Weekly 07/04/1994 pg. 57
About the Author
Juan García Ponce is one of the most respected contemporary essayists in Latin America. Translator Margarita Vargas is Associate Professor of Spanish at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Juan Bruce-Novoa (1944-2010) was Professor of Latin Amer
Share
