The Observer (15-01-06) has made "The Divine Husband" by US novelist Francisco Goldman, paperback of the week. The story is set in 19th century Central America mostly in Guatemala or thereabouts (although this is never explicitly stated in the book). Goldman, a jounalist who has written in Granta, the New Yorker, and the New York Times has written other novels on Guatemala including the "The Long Night of the White Chickens". He has also written on the assessination of Guatemalan bishop Juan Gerardi Conedera.Goldman was also a prominent defender of Guatemalan Nobel Peace Prize winner, Rigoberta Menchu, against accusations made by US academic David Stoll in his book, "Rigoberta MenchĂş and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans".
An excerpt from an article in the Daily Telegraph (06-02-06) about Francisco Goldman:
'The obsession with 'boom' writers is the most absurd, tedious, painful thing that's happened to three generations of Latin American writers," says the author Francisco Goldman, born in Boston in 1954 to a Guatemalan mother and Jewish father. "Publishers manufactured the magical realist genre, and it's still mixed up with a bigoted notion that if you aren't doing it, you aren't authentic."
Goldman, who grew up in New England and Guatemala, says, "Writing is always an act of deciphering yourself… at the heart of what I do is an obsession with blending." That characterises his writing. First, he married the "Jewish-American coming-of-age novel with the multi-voiced narration of some of the great boom novels"; now, in a story about the settling of 60,000 K'iche Indians from Guatemala in Massachusetts, home to H P Lovecraft, he is working to merge "the Gothic, New England horror novel with the immigrant novel".
"My imaginary homeland, the world where Guatemala and the US meet, is now a reality," he says.






