This section contains 4,728 words (approx. 12 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following interview-essay, Allende discusses with Mujica her writing technique, criticism of her works, and the uniqueness of Paula.
The night before this interview I attended a talk by Isabel Allende at Georgetown Universitya stop on a long publicity tour for her memoir, Paula (HarperCollins). Allende spoke about her book, which she began in 1991 in a hospital in Madrid, where her daughter was being treated for porphyria. A beautiful, intelligent, active young woman in her late twenties, Paula had just married a young Spaniard. She was working as a volunteer with poor children at a Catholic school in Madrid when she became ill. Although porphyria is rarely fatal, due to an error in procedure, an accident, or some other unknown circumstance, Paula never came out of her coma and died on December 6,1992. In spite of the fact that Paula was engendered by a tragedy, this...
This section contains 4,728 words (approx. 12 pages at 400 words per page) |