Knopf Publishing Group
The Winds of Maracaibo: A Novel by María Elena Morán, Madeline Jones (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
The Winds of Maracaibo: A Novel by María Elena Morán, Madeline Jones (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
Couldn't load pickup availability
Fiction - World Literature - South America - Venezuela - Family Life - Emmigration & Immigration - Hispanic and Latino
RELEASE DATE: 7/28/2026 (WILL SHIP DIRECTLY FROM OUR SUPPLIER'S WAREHOUSE)
Translated from the Spanish by: Madeline Jones
A propulsive family drama, the story of a woman determined to recover her kidnapped daughter amid the ruins of Chávez's social revolution--the fast-paced English-language debut of an award-winning and bestselling author that brings the Venezuelan migrant crisis to life in lyrical, seething prose, for readers of Elizabeth Acevedo, Jesmyn Ward, and Gabriela Garcia
It was too late now, y la ternura no basta--now that she'd tasted the gunpowder, and the gunpowder was bolivariano, revolutionary. And that unthinkable traitor Camilo was using it to blow up her life.
"Elisa left with Camilo." "Camilo took her out of the country."
These are the text messages Nina receives while living in the storage room of a university in Porto Alegre, Brazil, where she's cleaning houses to make money to send back home.
Home is 4,500 miles away, in Maracaibo, Venezuela, where the water never runs on Mondays and there's yet another blackout. Where a trip to the grocery store costs 220 times the minimum wage.
Home is Elisa, her thirteen-year-old daughter, who loves to run around the house and belt out Queen's "Don't Stop Me Now." Who should be growing, when instead her waist is shrinking. Home is Graciela, Nina's mother, who lately stays shut up in her room all day talking with her dead, most urgently her beloved husband, Raúl (who's just as eager to talk back from the grave).
And what the hell does Camilo think he's doing now, stealing off with their daughter to the United States of America--the one place Nina most assuredly never wants to call home?
Narrated through the voices of Nina and her family, and through the voice of her treacherous ex, Camilo, The Winds of Maracaibo is the heart-racing tale of a mother fighting to get her daughter back across the border, at any cost--a brave and furious reversal of the American Dream and an ode to the Venezuelan women who gave their blood, sweat, and tears to a nation dismantled by the egos of men.
AUTHOR BIO:
MARÍA ELENA MORÁN is a Venezuelan writer and screenwriter based in Brazil. She is the author of the novel Los Continentes del Adentro. Her second novel, The Winds of Maracaibo (published as Volver a cuándo in Spain), won the Café Gijón Prize in Spain and has been translated into Italian, Portuguese, and English.
"A taut, poignant snapshot of migration. . . . Though writing out of Venezuela is rare for American audiences, Morán's perspective on migration will resonate with readers familiar with themes of separation, asylum, bigotry, and resettling. What distinguishes the novel is Morán's ability to write in a variety of tones (ably captured by translator Jones) and her evocation of the desperation that fills migrants from different generations and class levels in different ways, and how skills and money are of little use, even when they're trying 'to start over in a city where Venezuelans weren't yet regarded as a pest.'" --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
" The Winds of Maracaibo is a searing portrait of Venezuela's migrant crisis and the ferocity of a mother's love. Through her dazzling English-language debut, María Elena Morán provides a type of antidote for the broad generalizations that breed indifference. A powerful story of survival, displacement, and the relentless search for home." --Kali Fajardo-Anstine, bestselling author of Woman of Light
"For a novel whose central theme is abandonment--a country neglecting its citizens, migrants leaving their home, absentee parents, even a ghost who refuses to haunt their loved one--I was delighted to find so much love in every page of The Winds of Maracaibo. María Elena Morán's characters come alive in all their complexities. I fell in love with them, their terrible decisions, their acts of bravery, the depths of their humanity, warts and all. This extraordinary novel is not a breeze, it's not even a storm. It's a hurricane heralding a brave new voice in Latin American letters." --Alejandro Puyana, author of Freedom Is a Feast
