BookFrontier
The Eternal Forest by Elena Sheppard

Book

The Eternal Forest

A Memoir of the Cuban Diaspora

Elena Sheppard

St. Martin's Press · Print & ebook · September 30, 2025

Reading lane: Hispanic & Latino Biography

"Spellbinding." — Booklist , starred review • "A must-read." — Library Journal "Poetic." —Emma Straub • "This is writing as spell-casting and archival longing." —Leslie Jamison A memoir of the Cuban diaspora that follows one family’s exile from the island, through a lyrical exploration of memory, cultural mythology, and the history of Cuban-American relations.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Why It Lands

A warm, reflective memoir that blends cultural literacy with an intimate, sustained read.

Come here for

  • memoir with cultural texture
  • family, women, and authors in conversation

Expect

  • insight and personal reflection
  • conversation-ready details

Book Details

Authors
Elena Sheppard
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Published
September 30, 2025
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Hispanic & Latino Biography · Cuban History
Reading lane
Hispanic & Latino Biography

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Hispanic & Latino Biography

  • Personal Memoirs

  • Cuban History

About This Book

"Spellbinding." — Booklist , starred review • "A must-read." — Library Journal "Poetic." —Emma Straub • "This is writing as spell-casting and archival longing." —Leslie Jamison A memoir of the Cuban diaspora that follows one family’s exile from the island, through a lyrical exploration of memory, cultural mythology, and the history of Cuban-American relations. History is undeniably dominated by its men, but the stories Elena Sheppard was brought up on were almost always abou...

Read full description

"Spellbinding." — Booklist , starred review • "A must-read." — Library Journal "Poetic." —Emma Straub • "This is writing as spell-casting and archival longing." —Leslie Jamison A memoir of the Cuban diaspora that follows one family’s exile from the island, through a lyrical exploration of memory, cultural mythology, and the history of Cuban-American relations. History is undeniably dominated by its men, but the stories Elena Sheppard was brought up on were almost always about Cuba’s women—everyday women, whose names would be forgotten and buried along with their bones unless someone took the effort to remember them. Cifuentes, Cuba, in the 1950s was nearly idyllic—at least that’s how Elena’s grandparents, Rosita and Gustavo Delgado, remember the Eden they left. When Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, Gustavo was placed on a list of political undesirables, and by the end of 1960, the couple and their two daughters had fled to Florida, with nothing more than five dollars, and a suitcase each. The Delgados were certain they would return to Cifuentes within a few months, after Castro’s reign had run its course. But they never went back, and a piece of each of their identities became frozen in that moment. In 1987, Elena was the first in Gustavo and Rosita’s family to be born in the United States, but through the memories that lived on in her grandmother’s mind, Cuba became the foundation of her childhood. Elena takes us inside these stories, and as we travel back and forth across the narrow Florida Straits that separate Miami and Havana, we also weave between past and present, to discover family secrets that are on the brink of being lost to time. In lyrical yet unflinching prose, The Eternal Forest follows one family’s exile from their homeland and in so doing, it tells the larger political story of the Cuban Revolution and its diaspora. Through a spellbinding blend of cultural myth, historical texts, and personal narrative, The Eternal Forest seeks to understand the nature of inheritance, how trauma and memory are passed down through generations, and what it means to yearn for an island you can never fully know.

Similar Books