
A Book of Dreams: A Novel by Cristina Pantoja Hidalgo
About the book: The lynchpin of A Book of Dreams is the narrative… Although the structure of the novel could be considered postmodern, (it) is not quite a postmodern novel. The parts of the novel may be given in fragments and assembled as a pastiche, but the novel’s drive is toward a story, which, though not obviously coherent, is nonetheless one that more or less gives sense to the dreams, hopes, and lives of the people inhabiting the fictional space of A Book of Dreams. The narrative drive—the search for the possibility of meaning-making through a story—betrays the underpinning project of the novel: to contribute to the construction of a story, not just for the lives of Angela’s friends, acquaintances, and her fictional characters in the tales, but for the nation as well… In effect, the entire novel is Angela’s notebook—a collection of stories (long and short ones), fantasies, dreams, and “real” stories… about Angela’s friends and acquaintances. Thus, alternating with the other entri