Kirkus Reviews QR Code
REINBOU by Pedro  Cabiya

REINBOU

by Pedro Cabiya ; translated by Jessica Powell

Pub Date: March 12th, 2024
ISBN: 9781662602511
Publisher: Astra House

Cabiya—a Puerto Rican writer who lives in the Dominican Republic—turns a military thriller about the 1965 Dominican civil war into a contemporary fairy tale about a young boy whose innocent goodness has the power to change lives.

The narrator of this novel, full of “disquisitions and digressions and detours,” is recounting these two stories to specific listeners. While their identities are not fully revealed until much later, from early on it’s clear that they’re hearing a braided tale about their father and grandfather. But this is no Princess Bride. The 1965 uprising was very real, and Cabiya offers an immersion into the Dominican Republic of the time and a history lesson on the U.S.’s problematic role in upending Dominican democracy. In this fictionalized version of events, American officers become involved in questionable schemes involving valuable gold ingots. As a result, heroic Dominican revolutionary leader Puro Maceta, a saintly (fictional) mix of Che Guevara and Jesus—both pointedly referenced in the novel—is betrayed by a Judas-like companion. Puro spends the last hours before his murder making love, and a decade later the son he and his beloved conceived is “perfect,” a mix of sweetness and wisdom beyond his years. Following rainbows caused by sprinklers on a golf course, which is coincidently owned by the people who caused his father’s death, 10-year-old Maceta finds small treasures, discarded everyday objects like a bird feeder, a bicycle chain, and a Magic 8 Ball, that inadvertently transform his neighbors’ lives; the notebook in which Maceta names and describes his discoveries is the book’s most charming element. But the villains from the war years continue to prey on Maceta’s neighbors in ugly ways involving sex and money until the convoluted plot concerning those still-missing ingots comes to fruition. Good and evil, love and violence are dualities at play as innocence is threatened but prevails.

A sometimes angry, sometimes sardonic, but ultimately optimistic view of humanity.