Lisa St Aubin de Terán
A new edition of the best-selling, award-winning first novel
Winner of the Somserset Maugham Award 1983
“Lydia Sinclair was just seventeen when she arrived on her husband’s estate in the Andes, and from the first day she felt that she belonged there. She had never felt that she belonged anywhere before that.”
When the Beltrán brothers came to this Andean valley, they found behind barred windows beautiful twin sisters – last in the line of an illustrious conquistador. Through them the Beltrán dynasty was born – a dynasty that ruled the valley for 200 years and was now returning to the dust.
Two centuries later, Lydia Sinclair was scarcely out of school when she fell in love with Don Diego Beltrán and left England behind for her husband’s Andean estate. Benito, the family’s oldest retainer, said that through her the valley would not be forgotten: ‘Fate has brought you here to us, to chronicle our decline.’ In the night’s stillness he told her of romance and battle, drought and pestilence, splendour and suffering.
The characters in the valley’s tumultuous history rose up before Lydia as if they still roamed the dusty slopes: Admiral Silence who enjoyed no one’s company so decided never to speak again; General Mario who prophesied the ruin of their valley as he decayed from leprosy behind a mask; María Candelaria whose beauty and wildness caused the massacre of nearly half of the Beltráns; La Comadre Matilide, the peasant woman of striking ugliness whom people bribed to stay in their houses because her departure left a sense of ill omen; the aged sisters who sat amidst hoards of china and gambled at cards for their every move. Finally there was Cristóbal Beltrán, who sifted the sand in the hourglass, ageless and all-knowing and indestructable.
Out of the upheaval and decay come a narrative and language astonishing in their fertility.
Lisa St Aubin de Terán
Lisa St Aubin de Terán is the prize-winning author of 20 books, including novels, short stories and nonfiction. She is Anglo-Guyanese, and was born and brought up in London. Aged 16, she married an exiled Venezuelan freedom fighter and landowner. After two years travelling around Italy and France, she moved to the Venezuelan Andes, where she managed her husband’s semi-feudal sugar plantation for seven years. Much of her writing draws on that time and place. And time warps, rural communities, isolation and grace under pressure are still the dominant themes in both her life and work.
On the strength of Keepers of the House, she was chosen as a Best of British Young Novelist in 1982.
After leaving the Andean hacienda, she lived as a perpetual traveller for the next twenty years. Then, in 2004, she settled in north Mozambique, establishing the Teran Foundation to develop community tourism. She lived there until 2021, returning to London with a bag full of manuscripts, including her autobiography Better Broken Than New, and two new novels (soon to be published by Amaurea): The Hobby and Kafka Lodge.
This new edition accompanies the publication of Lisa’s new memoir, Better Broken Than New
ISBN 978-1-914278-15-0 (hardback) (£24.94/€28.95/$29.95)
ISBN 978-1-914278-16-7 (paperback) (£12.95/€14.95/$15.95)
ISBN 978-1-914278-17-4 (ebook) (£2.99/€3.49/$3.99)
“A genuine and haunting and unforgettable work of art. It is this novel’s triumph to be consistently exhilarating, never less than a pleasure to read.”
Standard
“Has something of Márquez’s power of depicting in microcosm the cruelties and catastrophes, the endemic corruption, and the feudal relationship with death and the supernatural that characterises South American life.”
New Statesman
“Richly evocative and cunningly crafted.”
Observer
“This is an account – particularly gripping because of the quality of the writing and the esoteric setting – of a strong-willed young woman’s education by experience.”
Times Literary Supplement
Also by Lisa St Aubin de Terán, and published by Amaurea Press:
Share this page