
Something Fierce
Memoirs of a Revolutionary Daughter
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Narrated by:
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Carmen Aguirre
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By:
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Carmen Aguirre
About this listen
Winner of CBC's Canada Reads 2012 and Globe 100 Best Book of the year in 2011!
Carmen Aguirre was six-year-old when she and her family fled to Canada following General Augusto Pinochet’s violent 1973 coup in Chile. She was only eleven-years-old when her mother and stepfather joined the resistance movement and returned to South America, taking Carmen and her sister went with them. As their mother and stepfather set up a safe house for resistance members in La Paz, Bolivia, the girls' own double lives began. At 18, Carmen became a militant herself, plunging further into a world of terror, paranoia and euphoria.
Something Fierce covers the eventful decade of 1979 to 1989 and takes the reader inside war-ridden Peru, dictator-ruled Bolivia, post-Malvinas Argentina and Pinochet’s Chile in the eventful decade between 1979 and 1989. Writing with passion and deep personal insight, Aguirre captures her constant struggle to reconcile her commitment to the movement with the desires of her youth. Dramatic, suspenseful and darkly comic, it is a rare first-hand account of revolutionary life and a passionate argument against forgetting.
©2011 Carmen Aguirre (P)2012 Post Hypnotic Press Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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- Steven
- 12-19-15
Inspiring
This book captures incredible stories from the past, I'm so grateful to have read it
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Overall
- David Brown
- 04-05-18
revolutionary read
great story, read by Carmen Aguirre herself. learn about the revolutionary attempts to bring justice to Chile, and for those exiled by Pinochet.
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