Bárbara Mujica

Bárbara Mujica

Bárbara Mujica is a novelist, short story writer, scholar, and theater director. Mujica’s latest novel, I Am Venus,explores the identity of the model for the famous Rokeby Venus, the only extant nude of seventeenth-Spanish painter Diego de Velázquez. It is scheduled for publication in summer 2013. Her critically acclaimed novel, Sister Teresa, (Overlook 2007; paperback, Penguin 2008) depicts the life of Teresa de Avila, the most beloved saint of the Spanish-speaking world, after the Virgin. A play based on the novel is currently being developed by The Actors Studio in Los Angeles. Mujica’s novel frida (Overlook 2001; paperback, Plume 2002) was an international bestseller that has appeared in seventeen languages. Based on the tumultuous relationship between Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera,frida was a Book-of-the-Month Club alternate. Her other book-length fiction includes The Deaths of Don Bernardo(novel, 1990), Sanchez across the Street (stories, 1997), and Far from My Mother’s Home (stories, 1999; French edition 2007). 


44 entries by Bárbara Mujica

Book Review

The Bullet Swallower: A Novel

By Elizabeth Gonzalez James

The Bullet Swallower: A Novel

This absorbing western-like saga is shot through with magical realism.

Feature

An Interview with Betty Milan

The multilingual writer talks her Lebanese heritage, “self-xenophobia,” and the work of Jacques Lacan.

Book Review

The Sunshine Girls

By Molly Fader

The Sunshine Girls

On sisterhood, friendship, and the secret lives of our mothers.

Book Review

From Dust to Stardust: A Novel

By Kathleen Rooney

From Dust to Stardust: A Novel

The captivating tale of a Jazz Age ingenue.

Book Review

L.A. Weather

By María Amparo Escandón

L.A. Weather

A Mexican American family navigates change in an exuberant, complicated city brought vividly to life.

Book Review

The Sunshine Girls: A Novel

On sisterhood, friendship, and the secret lives of our mothers.

Book Review

Bonhoeffer’s America

By Joel Looper

Bonhoeffer’s America

The German theologian came to New York twice. What he saw appalled him.

Feature

Breaking the Silence

Michèle Sarde searches for her family’s Jewish roots.

Book Review

Book Review

L.A. Weather: A Novel

By María Amparo Escandón

L.A. Weather: A Novel

A Mexican American family navigates change in an exuberant, complicated city brought vividly to life.

Book Review

Bonhoeffer’s America: A Land without Reformation

The German theologian came to New York twice. What he saw appalled him.

Book Review

Black Sheep: A Blue-Eyed Negro Speaks of Abandonment, Belonging, Racism, and Redemption

The mixed-race son of addicts spends his life struggling to fit in.

Book Review

Stoic Wisdom: Ancient Lessons for Modern Resilience

Nine timeless lessons for living a calmer, happier life.

Book Review

How We Read Now: Strategic Choices for Print, Screen, & Audio

A well-researched, accessible treatise on all the ways we experience and absorb words.

Feature

Marjorie and Me

Circles of Madness not only introduced me to an extraordinary poet but launched a lifelong literary friendship.

Book Review

The Scent of Buenos Aires

By Hebe Uhart; translated by Maureen Shaughnessy

The Scent of Buenos Aires

These delicate tales of everyday lives in and around Argentina’s capital reflect on the passage of time and small pleasures.

Book Review

Igifu

By Scholastique Mukasonga; translated by Jordan Stump

Igifu

For Rwandan Tutsis forced into exile, hunger, fear, and grief are constant companions.

Feature

A Trenchant Trickster

In the precarious world of early 17th-century Germany, Tyll Ulenspiegel learns life is a tightrope.

Book Review

Silver, Sword & Stone

By Marie Arana

Silver, Sword & Stone

A trio of themes dominates the saga, argues the author: mineral wealth, violence, and spirituality.

Feature

An Interview with Domnica Radulescu

The celebrated Romanian novelist and playwright discusses the fiction of protest, experimental theater, and her invincible, positive outlook.

Feature

Exquisitely Evocative

In Braided Memories, Marjorie Agosín pays homage to her great-grandmother, who escaped Nazi-dominated Vienna and made her way to Chile.

Book Review

The Scent of Buenos Aires: Stories

By Hebe Uhart; translated by Maureen Shaughnessy

The Scent of Buenos Aires: Stories

These delicate tales of everyday lives in and around Argentina’s capital reflect on the passage of time and small pleasures.

Book Review

Quichotte: A Novel

By Salman Rushdie

Quichotte: A Novel

A traveling salesman struggles to distinguish between reality and fantasy in this uneven re-imagining of Don Quixote.

Book Review

Silver, Sword & Stone: Three Crucibles of the Latin American Story

A trio of themes dominates the saga, argues the author: mineral wealth, violence, and spirituality.

Book Review

The White Islands

By Marjorie Agosín; translated by Jacqueline Nanfito

The White Islands

One of Chile’s most celebrated poets captures the voice and soul of Sephardic women.

Book Review

The Sagrada Família: The Astonishing Story of Gaudí’s Unfinished Masterpiece

A fascinating depiction of an architect and his struggle to create a singular basilica.

Book Review

The Tenderness of God: Reclaiming Our Humanity

An acclaimed theologian delivers a delightfully readable exploration of two medieval saints whose ideas are of great contemporary relevance.

Book Review

Jane Welsh Carlyle and her Victorian World: A Story of Love, Work, Marriage, and Friendship

“A suffering wife…sadly neglected by her...self-absorbed husband” finally gets recognized for her own intelligence.

Book Review

The White Islands / Las Islas Blancas

By Marjorie Agosín; translated by Jacqueline Nanfito

The White Islands / Las Islas Blancas

One of Chile’s most celebrated poets captures the voice and soul of Sephardic women.

Book Review

The Mortifications: A Novel

By Derek Palacio

The Mortifications: A Novel

The pull of family and Cuba loom large in this fascinating story reminiscent of Márquez.

Book Review

The Story of a Brief Marriage: A Novel

A husband and wife struggle to stay alive for a single day during the Sri Lankan civil war.

Book Review

Marlene: A Novel of Marlene Dietrich

This biographical novel about a Hollywood legend draws in readers from the very first line.

Book Review

Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging

A thoughtful reconsideration of war and PTSD.

Book Review

Book Review

Country of Red Azaleas: A Novel

By Domnica Radulescu

Country of Red Azaleas: A Novel

Despite war, separation, and loss, two women find strength in their love for one another.

Book Review

Simone: A Novel

By Eduardo Lalo; translated by David Frye

Simone: A Novel

A slow-moving yet thoughtful story set in 20th-century San Juan.

Feature

An Interview with Marjorie Agosín

The acclaimed Chilean writer discusses revolution, poetry, and the role of Judaism in her life.

Book Review

Afterwar: Healing the Moral Wounds of Our Soldiers

A philosophical examination of the toll emotional pain takes on service members.

Book Review

Isabella: the Warrior Queen

By Kirstin Downey

Isabella: the Warrior Queen

This compelling, thoughtful biography humanizes the iconic Spanish monarch.

Book Review

The Train to Warsaw: A Novel

Two lovers haunted by the Holocaust return to Poland to find nothing of their past remains.

Book Review

The Castle of Whispers: A Novel

By Carole Martinez

The Castle of Whispers: A Novel

The bestselling French author transports readers to 12th-century France, while still providing hard-hitting social commentary.

Book Review

The Hen Who Dreamed She Could Fly: A Novel

By Sun-Mi Hwang; translated by Chi-Young Kim

The Hen Who Dreamed She Could Fly: A Novel

A deceptively simple barnyard fable broaches many existential themes.

Book Review

The Sound of Things Falling

Juan Gabriel Vásquez

The Sound of Things Falling

Memories of brutality form a common language for the people of Bogotá, Colombia. Can these citizens build a future different from the past?

Book Review

My Father’s Ghost Is Climbing in the Rain

Patricio Pron, translated by Mara Faye Lethem

My Father’s Ghost Is Climbing in the Rain

A young writer estranged from his past wrestles with the suppressed truth of his father’s political activity during Argentina’s “dirty war.”