Reviews

Palm Trees in the Snow by Luz Gabas

beingshort's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful inspiring lighthearted mysterious reflective relaxing tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

michellemybelle's review against another edition

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4.75

season 1 episode 1 of “I watched the film (or show) and now I’m reading the book” 📺📚: a classic, timeless, and epic story! 

africreole's review against another edition

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5.0

Love is heart breaking when not allowed to blossom

This was a beautifully written story on Colonial Guinea's culture birthing into an independent nation along with the heart ache it raged in the personal live of its people. Even though Basila and Killian were desparetely in love, their lives were torn apart by its newly forming government.

Despite their not seeing each other in decades, they still considered themselves husband and wife in their souls even though Killian married someone else in his  homeland of Spain.


This was a well written and plotted out story that made one feel hopeful for Basila and Killian

estefaniaesba's review against another edition

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5.0

Demasiado bueno, no sabes los giros que da, la historia es simplemente maravillosa y tiene ese tinte de realidad en los sucesos que son los que realmente atrapan!

adelthings's review against another edition

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3.0

Creo que la trama que desarrolla es muy interesante que se mezcla muy bien con la ambientación en la que se desarrolla, quizá para mi gusto en algunas ocasiones, le sobraba tanta descripción de los paisajes y las escenas, aunque quizás sea porque no estoy acostumbrada a este tipo de novela.

attytheresa's review against another edition

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5.0

I found this a really interesting and beautiful novel, one I highly recommend. It's the story of a white Spanish family from the Spanish Pyrenees who worked on the cocoa plantations during the Spanish colonization of the Equatorial Guinea island of Fernando Po (n/k/a Bioko) from the 1930s to about 1971 when the whites were forced to leave an independent Equatorial Guinea by the psychopathic dictator. Descendants of the family revisit Bioko in 2003/2004 looking to unravel some family secrets involving potential half-siblings and past events, and the title refers to the stories heard during the long winters in the Pyrenees about life under the palms on the cocoa plantation. At its heart, this is a love story - of a man for a woman and a man for a place.

The author does a superb job of weaving the actual history of Bioko into the fictional story; it even drives portions of it. As I reached the halfway point of the book, I realized how little I knew about Spanish colonies in Africa or even about Equatorial Guinea today. So I did some research and it did inform my reading going forward. But such research is really unnecessary because the author has interwoven her own research, including the rich oral histories of family and neighbors who were among the Spaniards who traveled to work on Fernando Po. The novel sings with this truth. I was just impatient.

But one wonder my research did provide that is not in the book ... actual photographs of the astonishing corridor of tall palms leading to the cocoa plantation on Fernando Po, Sampaka. Just google images of Sampaka Equatorial New Guinea.

I read this as my book written by someone from a country I have not visited - Spain - for the Pop Sugar 2017 Reading Challenge. It would also fit a book set in two different time periods.

luchacc's review against another edition

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5.0

"No puedo decirte ni cómo ni cuándo, pero llegará un día en que esta pequeña isla se apoderará de ti y desearás no abandonarla... No conozco a nadie que se haya marchado sin derramar lágrimas de desconsuelo."

Una historia contada a dos tiempos, entre Guinea Ecuatorial y España, gente de mar y de montaña, un pasaje de la historia poco conocido, con descripciones magistrales que te transportan, casi puedes sentir el aroma a cacao, a mar, escuchar los tambores y ver la entrada con las palmeras, un libro que tenia pendiente desde hace mucho tiempo porque sabia que me dolería, pero es hermoso, lo bueno es que fue el último del año y tengo un par de días para recuperarme de la resaca literaria

mgatta's review against another edition

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4.0

Como no iba a gustarme un libro que explora las complejidades coloniales de Guinea Ecuatorial. Estoy entre las 4 y las 5 estrellas eso si, porque aunque el libro es bueno y me ha gustado mucho, a veces la historia de los personajes principales no me acababa de convencer.
Me ha gustado eso si que se reflejen los distintos periodos que Guinea paso con su relación a España, y el hecho de que muestre que no solo había españoles, sino muchas otras nacionalidades, incluidas otras nacionalidades africanas, que sufrieron igualmente del despotismo de Macías. A veces me hubiera gustado que la autora hubiese explorado mas a fondo el tema político, y que no lo dejara a parte para concentrarse solo en la historia de amor entre Kilian y Bisila en los momentos más interesantes de la historia (políticamente hablando).
Saber de las desgracias que sufrieron los guineanos de todos los bandos y etnias también me ha resultado muy interesante, puesto que en España nunca tuvo mucha repercusión, y ni siquiera hoy en día lo enseñan en las clases de historia de España, lo cual me parece una vergüenza.
Tras leer este libro, me han entrado las ganas de leer los libros que la autora menciona al final de la novela, relacionados con Guinea.

rebekel89's review against another edition

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dark emotional slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.75

cherylo's review against another edition

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4.0

3.5 stars