![]() ![]() However, for me, they were the meat in the sandwich to Talia’s bread. At first, I thought Mauro and Elena would be mainly ‘backstory’, given to setting to Talia’s circumstance. These story strings alternate in a genuinely customary way for the first 2/3 of the Infinite country by Patricia Engel. We discover how this family came to be separated across continents. While ingenious Talia advances back to Bogotá, we get familiar with the story of Mauro and Elena. ![]() In danger of failing to catch her plane ‘home’. However, her actions taken in anger have landed her in a far off girls’ reform school. She loves them both more than anything in her life, yet after her grandma died, she’s looking forward to joining her mom and siblings in the USA. ![]() So I intend to search out her prior books in the expectation of reading more accessible Latino lore.Īt 15 years old, US resident Talia has been raised in Colombia by her maternal grandma and with the irregular assistance of her dad, Mauro. As I get it, this is a sign of Patricia Engel’s writing. The unforeseen delight however, was to learn about the gods and legends of the Muisca peoples of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the Colombian Andes, sprinkled all through the contemporary story. It lived up to my expectations, aside from a minor issue that I will explain later. Despite the fact that I have not read writer previously written books. Infinite country by Patricia Engel truly grabbed my attention as it was in the list of most anticipated book of this year. ![]()
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