Butterfly Winter cover art

Butterfly Winter

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About this listen

Butterfly Winter, W.P. Kinsella's first novel in 15 years, is the story of Julio and Esteban Pimental, twins born in the Caribbean country of Courteguay, a lush and enchanted but impoverished enclave on the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic where time moves at its own pace and reality is open to question. The brothers are destined to play ball in America, and to shape the history of their baseball-crazed homeland. They mature quickly and by the age of 10 they leave home for the Major Leagues. Julio is a winning pitcher who, much to the chagrin of any team that signs him, will only throw to his catcher brother, who is a very weak hitter.

As they pursue their baseball dreams, events in their homeland, including political brutalities and the outlawing of baseball, continue to shape their lives. They are monitored by the Wizard, a mysterious figure who controls events behind the scenes. In his last years, the Wizard tells the story of the twins, their family and their lovers to a skeptical gringo journalist.

Butterfly Winter is a magical literary romp that includes a diabolical chiropractor, a romance blessed by butterflies, and a deep political undercurrent that unites the wealthy North with the baseball-loving, talent-laden but oppressed and deprived South.

©2011 W. P. Kinsella (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
Fiction Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Political Sports Caribbean Magic Winter Wizardry Magic Users

Editor reviews

Baseball-obsessed author J. P. Kinsella delivers new fiction after 15 years. Butterfly Winter is set in Courteguay, an island near the Dominican Republic. As in the Dominican Republic the citizens of Courteguay are baseball fanatics who dream of becoming professional players in America. The novel follows twin brothers who migrate to America but remain vulnerable to the vagaries of life back home. One twin is an expert pitcher, but he insists on pitching only to his brother, a poor hitter. These brothers and their fellow quirky characters create a layered world full of shifting mores and political mayhem. Kinsella again employs magical realism to moving effect. Narrator Zach Villa’s arresting voice lures the listener into trusting this grim yet whimsical dreamscape.

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It made no sense to me. It was like reading a first draft of a bunch of chapters that weren’t in any order and many of which seemed to have nothing to do with the wholeness of the story.
It felt deconstructed and I couldn’t even start to explain what the story is about, nor how it ended.
It would be like trying to explain in sequence, scene by scene, the film ‘pulp fiction’ to someone who hasn’t seen it. But this book didn’t pull it all together in the end. (For me anyway)
I found the narrator difficult to listen to at times, especially when he did the character with asthma.
However, the author wrote some truly beautifully descriptive analogies that placed me right there and made me think ‘wow’ that was brilliant!
Who would I recommend it to? Nobody I know I’m sorry to say and if I’d paid for this, I’m reluctant to say that I’d return it and get my credit back. Sorry

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