
On the eve of leaving Cuba for Florida, a four-year-old girl promises her dying grandfather to return to her birthplace. That night an intruder sexually assaults her. As she adapts to her new American reality, she suffers distressing physical and emotional symptoms. Convinced that her daughter is possessed, her mother takes her to a Santeria priest for a cure. Years later, she returns to her homeland as a journalist, becomes entrapped in the game of espionage between Cuba and the U.S., suffers a devastating betrayal, and learns family secrets. Disillusioned by the experience, she embarks on a spiritual journey that leads to reconciliation, forgiveness, and a return to wholeness.
Available at Amazon, in print and on Kindle.
“In a quietly moving memoir, “Guajira, The Cuba Girl,” journalist Zita Arocha weaves an evocative, deeply thoughtful, and intimate love letter to her homeland. Arocha writes with a heartfelt yearning for her elusive Cuba - lost somewhere in her two countries' convoluted shadow and toxic politics. She pens words like a poet, carving pain, love, betrayal and joy from an unforgiving country and family. An extraordinary read!”
—Alfredo Corchado, Mexico Bureau chief of The Dallas Morning News and author of Midnight in Mexico and Homelands.
“A memoir rich in detail and pathos from an accomplished journalist who has unleashed her reportorial talents on her own story of self-discovery and healing from heartbreaking childhood trauma in Cuba and exile.”
—Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald columnist and author of Reclaiming Paris.
“Guajira, the Cuba girl is more than just a memoir of one woman confronting past traumas. It is a defiant examination of the ways all exiled people ache for a homeland, even when that homeland wounds us. Zita Aroha turns a quiet song of tragedy into a symphony of strength. The result is a testament to the resiliency of the human spirit.”
—Alex Espinoza, author of Cruising: An Intimate History of a Radical Pastime.
“She pulls us into the same spell she has lived under for decades. And then seeks to have us awaken from her dream.”
—Victoria Waddle
“A moving and heartfelt exploration of loss, trauma, and what it means to be at home.”
— Peter Copeland
“This is a book for those who enjoy stories of immigrant challenges. The confusion, pain, and promise of a new life in an unknown country is a timeless narrative.”
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