What They Said About Luisa
Erika Rummel
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Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur
Beschreibung
An enchanting tale of the complex and fascinating life of Luisa Abrego of Seville, an emancipated woman who forges a new future for herself in colonial Mexico and gets caught in the Spanish Inquisition.
Luisa Abrego, an enslaved woman in Seville, is impregnated by her master, then set free upon his death. With limited options for her future, Luisa agrees to marry a white man who wants to take her with him to Mexico, even though it means leaving her infant son behind in the care of nuns. The couple set off on a dangerous sea voyage and a perilous trek across unconquered territory, and when the settlers’ caravan is attacked by Indigenous warriors, Luisa is forced to kill a man in self-defence. Years later, still wracked with guilt and convinced she must atone for her sin, Luisa confesses to having made a promise of marriage to another man long before, in Spain. By the laws of the church this makes her a bigamist, a criminal who must be tried by the fearsome Inquisition.
Based on sixteenth-century trial records of the real Luisa, this novel is not just one woman’s life in fragments but a carefully researched imagining, told in the vivid, distinct voices of the Europeans who came into contact with her.
Kundenbewertungen
Slavery in Spain, woman of colour, Mexican Inquisition, race, emigration, mulatta, power of the church in the 16th century, Spanish settlers in Mexico, bigamy, life of freed slaves, mixed marriage, superstition, wars between settlers and indigenous population, dangers of Atlantic crossing, discrimination, trial and incarceration, indigenous population of Mexico, dangers of mining, silver mining in Mexico, first biracial marriage in the New World, social status