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Dreaming in Cuban Chapter 7: Celia's Letters: 1942-1949 Summary

  • This is another epistolary chapter, beginning with Celia's observations on life after the Spanish Civil War—dictators in both Cuba and Spain.
  • She reflects on her obsessive and persistent letter-writing to a man she no longer knows.
  • Celia reports about the tidal wave and how it damaged her piano. She frets about being able to play Debussy again.
  • As her letters continue, Celia pushes against her ordinary, dull life. We think the word ennui sums it up.
  • In 1946, she gives birth to her son Javier. We haven't heard anything about Javier really up to this point (something worth noting). Now we learn that he takes after Celia's father.
  • Celia tells Gustavo that she doesn't know why she was saved from her depression by Jorge. What was it all for?
  • Her final reflection in this series of letters has to do with suffering and imagination: can they be separated?