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Cinelle Barnes

Auteur de Monsoon Mansion

3+ oeuvres 174 utilisateurs 3 critiques

Œuvres de Cinelle Barnes

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Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Nationalité
Philippines
Pays (pour la carte)
Philippines
Lieu de naissance
Manila, Philippines
Lieux de résidence
South Carolina, USA
Agent
Noah Ballard

Membres

Critiques

Memoir of the author’s childhood growing up in Manila in a turbulent home environment. Her family was wealthy and lived in a mansion; however, the Gulf War drastically impacted her parents’ business and they descended into poverty. She subsequently experienced many traumatic episodes and was forsaken by those who were supposed to protect her. As a warning, this book includes child neglect, animal cruelty, and domestic abuse.

I enjoyed learning more about the culture and history of the Philippines, but the author’s personal story is very painful to read. A child should never be subjected to such trauma and isolation. I think the author’s story may provide inspiration to a person struggling to overcome an oppressive situation. I hope it was cathartic for her and am glad she has found her way to a better life.
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Signalé
Castlelass | 2 autres critiques | Oct 30, 2022 |
Cinelle Barnes' memoir Monsoon Mansion is like Educated or The Glass Castle, because it feels like reading fiction, with the constant background knowledge that this really happened. These characters exist.

At first, young Cinelle experiences extreme luxury, although her parents have a dramatic and explosive relationship. Their home is a palace, with servants and endless luxuries. Beautiful clothes, fine food, and most importantly, connections to the powerful elite. Her father's wealth comes from connecting migrant Filipino laborers with Saudi employers, but when the political situation shifts, he loses his wealth and status. He disappears, promising to bring his men home safely... but I sort of thought he was trying to escape from his increasingly volatile and unstable wife, too.

Just as Cinelle experienced almost unimaginable luxuries, she also faces almost unimaginable hardships. After her father leaves, the family struggles to live even a modest, middle-class life, and her mother can't handle the end of her privileges. Young Cinelle tries to keep up appearances, surviving on a few cans of food and almost no care, but still attending a posh school, where she pretends everything is great and her maid just forgot to pack her snacks today or she doesn't have any small bills today.

Her mother's violent emotions power a lot of the family's life, and her new partner is even more extreme, constantly grabbing up any resources around for new get-rich-quick schemes. Cinelle and her brother attempt some normalcy and try to earn money, but any progress is immediately stolen by their mother's boyfriend. It's hard to see the children still trying for affection and stability from a mother who simply can't provide either one, and remember that this is a memoir.

There is a dreamlike quality to this book, partly from the prose style and partly from the environment, a semi-destroyed palace in beautiful, dangerous tropical surroundings. With descriptions of cockfighting, drinking tainted water, and loads of fights, many of the scenes are not pretty, even gross sometimes, but even in those parts, the writing style is still really lovely.
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Signalé
TheFictionAddiction | 2 autres critiques | Aug 12, 2020 |
Cinelle Barnes was born into a successful family--her father, though from a common background, was a very successful businessman. Her mother was from an upper class family. Young Cinelle had everything she could ever want, from things to servants to food. Until the Gulf War. Her father, who supplied Filipino laborers to the Middle East, was determined to get his employees home safely. That devotedness cost his family their wealth. A few years later, they had no running water, holes due to termites, chickens everywhere. This is the story of how Cinelle learned to survive and fight for herself, and of those that helped and taught her things an upper-class preteen girl would not know.

Today, Barnes is a college graduate, lives in the US, and is a wife, mother, and writer.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dreesie | 2 autres critiques | Oct 12, 2018 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Aussi par
1
Membres
174
Popularité
#123,126
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
3
ISBN
9

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