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Author:  Anne Enright
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Product Summary

Format: Paperback
ISBN-10: 0802141196
ISBN-13: 9780802141194
Buy.com Sku: 35230272
Publish Date: 4/16/2007
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 8.25H x 5.5L x 0.5T
Pages:  230
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The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch is a dazzling novel from a writer of international caliber, based on the life of the nineteenth-century Irishwoman who became Paraguay's Eva Peron. Eliza Lynch met Francisco Solano Lopez in Paris, when she was nineteen and he was in Europe to recruit engineers for the first railroad in South America. He left several months later with a pregnant Eliza beside him. Reviled by Asuncion society and the family of her lover, who never married her, Eliza nevertheless had her son baptized his heir. In less than a decade, Lopez became dictator and plunged Paraguay into a conflict that would kill over half its population. By then Eliza was notorious-as both the angel of the battlefield, inspiring the troops, and the demon driving Lopez's ambition-and when Lopez was killed in battle, she buried him in a shallow grave dug with her own hands. Anne Enright has written a gorgeous, deeply resonant novel.
From the Publisher:
An historical novel based on the story of Eliza Lynch, the Irish wife of a Paraguayan dictator, explores the relationship between this young European woman and the notorious Latin American leader Francisco Solano. Reprint.An historical novel based on the story of Eliza Lynch, the Irish wife of a Paraguayan dictator, explores the relationship between this young European woman and the notorious Latin American leader Francisco Solano. Reprint.
Annotation:
An Irish girl from Dublin becomes the mistress of Francisco Solano Lopez, the Paraguayan dictator, in Anne Enright's novel, which is based on a true tale. The novel tackles the question of whether Lopez was a hero or a disaster, but its main emphasis is on recreating the times in which it is set--the second half of the 19th century.
Praise
London Review of Books
"[A] rich, flamboyant, mannered book, written with condensed, self-conscious stylishness, dazzling with images and sensations and violence, and daring you to resist it from its first outrageous sentence." - Hermione Lee 10/17/2002

Literary Review
"Enright's prose is sensuous and condensed. There is a lush, erotic concentration on powerful moments, memorably realised...." - Patricia Duncker December 2002

New York Times Book Review
"Slighted pride is the motive Eliza's recent biographers produce for her behavior. It seems inadequate. Enright produces a more nuanced cause--deprivation--that she buries in such a wealth of virtuoso imagery that it is not immediately apparent....Born from hunger, Enright's Eliza needs to surround herself with luxury....She has suffered, and the world must pay for it. It is an answer, and an elegantly wrapped one, but Enright's Eliza still remains a strangely impenetrable creation." - Miranda Seymour 03/23/2003

Read A Chapter


Chapter One

A Fish

Paris, March 1854

Francisco Solano López put his penis inside Eliza Lynch on a lovely spring day in Paris, in 1854. They were in a house on the rue St-Sulpice; an ancient street, down which people have always strolled in a state of pleasant imagining. In the spring of 1854, no imagination was needed as Francisco Solano López pushed his penis into Eliza Lynch and pulled it back again, twenty times in all. This was quite a lot of times for Francisco Solano López , but something about Eliza Lynch distracted him from the usual rush of his pleasure. Something about Eliza Lynch gave him pause.

Outside, the birds sang, trees rustled and fancy carriages rattled by. Inside, the four-poster bed was hung with turquoise, its enormous baldaquin billowing above them and gathered into a pucker of silk that mirrored, as she lay under it, the lovely navel of Eliza Lynch.

Apart from the magnificent bed, she had nothing. There was a burled w

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