
The Grand Paloma Resort by Cleyvis Natera (Neruda on the Park) is a novel of race, class, secrets, and striving, set within a luxury resort staffed by struggling locals amid the natural beauty of the Dominican Republic.
Sisters Laura and Elena have only each other and the Grand Paloma Resort. Laura has been her sister's caretaker since they were 14 and four years old, when their mother died. The Grand Paloma has been Laura's career and lifeline. Through her work, she was able to send Elena to a global academy, meant to secure the younger woman's future. But Elena persists, in Laura's eyes, in slacking, taking Ecstasy and partying while working as a babysitter at the resort. In the novel's opening pages, a young child in Elena's care--from a family of great wealth and privilege--has been badly injured. It falls to Laura, yet again, to clean up: Elena must be protected from criminal charges, and the resort from bad press.
But this time, despite Laura's experience in saving the day, a bad situation spirals. Elena thinks she sees a way out by accepting a large sum of money from a tourist in exchange for giving him access to two young local girls. Although she initially believes the girls won't come to harm, the crisis worsens when the children go missing. All of that--with a frightened Elena and Laura at maximum stress and frustration--coincides with an approaching category-five hurricane. A larger cast of already marginalized resort employees are endangered in a ripple effect, and Laura's career is at risk. Over the course of seven days, it becomes increasingly clear that these various lives will never be the same.
Natera deftly splices into this narrative the history of the Dominican Republic and the plight of Haitian workers. The Dominican Republic is a beautiful paradise beset by poverty and racial stratification, emphasized all the more when locals intersect with the extraordinary wealth and power of the Grand Paloma's guests. One of those guests sees it as "a humanitarian crisis so large, so seemingly without end, that there was little to do but look the other way." At the heart of the novel's conflict is the question of what each character will do to survive.
With a propulsively paced plot and heart-racingly high stakes, The Grand Paloma Resort interrogates capitalism and exploitation through a community's concern for two little girls. The result is exhilarating, entertaining, and thought-provoking. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia
Shelf Talker: Missing children and a category-five hurricane converge in desperate circumstances at an exclusive luxury resort in the Dominican Republic in this heart-wrenching novel.