When it becomes obvious that the Republican forces have no chance of victory against Francisco Franco’s right-wing forces, Victor asks his friend Aitor Ibarra to take his mother Carme and Roser, who is pregnant with Guillem’s child, to France. As a medic serving on the front lines of battle, Victor must stay in Spain until the bitter end of the war. Roser was in love with Victor’s brother Guillem, who died fighting for the Republican cause. Victor and Roser’s marriage begins as one of convenience, not love. Originally Catalonian Spanish, Victor and Roser become Chilean. Their story explains what it means to belong to family and community. Ultimately, the pair return to Chile, where they have made their home when the political atmosphere allows it. Both times, reactionary forces overturned democratically elected leaders via force, and Victor and Roser stood with democracy. Exiled from Spain in 1939, Victor and Roser are again exiled from their home in Chile years later. Through their relationship, Victor and Roser expose the true meaning of love, as their love for each other strengthens throughout their lives. Beginning in the last years of the Spanish Civil War, the novel uses the characters Victor Dalmau and Roser Bruguera to depict the pain of war and exile and the hope of new beginnings.
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