![]() ![]() The brevity of the chapters showcases Joseph's gift for metaphoric language (e.g., her description of Ana Rosa's first crush: ""My dark eyes trailed him like a line of hot soot wherever he went""). The author's portraits of Ana Rosa and her family are studies in spare language the chapters often grow out of one central image-such as the gri gri tree where Ana Rosa keeps watch over her village and gets ideas for her writing-giving the novel the feel of an extended prose poem. Ana Rosa dreams of becoming a writer even though no one but the president writes books she learns to dance the merengue by listening to the rhythms of her beloved ocean and the love of her older brother, Guario, comforts her through many difficulties. ![]() Through the heroine's poetry and recollections, readers gain a rare intimate view of life in the Dominican Republic. In finely wrought chapters that at times read more like a collection of related short stories than a novel, Joseph (Jump Up Time) presents slices from the life of Ana Rosa just as she is about to turn 13. ![]()
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