"Solitaria is a gem. The novel’s clean and elegant architecture—life organized and thwarted across a series of rooms—reveals the intimate experience of power and powerlessness. The social hierarchy of the racial order is articulated subtly in the spatial arrangements of servitude, all the little hidden rooms that sustain and support the world. The mother-daughter dyad at the center of the story details the intergenerational domination characteristic of the lives of those deemed disposable and at the same time offers the promise of breaking that hold and refusing servitude. I love that the rooms speak.”
—Saidiya Hartman, author of Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments
“In riveting, tight prose, Eliana Alves Cruz lays out her characters’ insurgent desires—ones we all possess—to live a good life against the external and internal forces that hold them back. The rare alchemy in Solitaria is not only that the characters speak, but so too the walls, the rooms, the Solitarias, that witness the lives within.”
—Dionne Brand, author of Salvage and A Map to the Door of No Return
“Enthralling and deftly narrated, Solitaria reveals the perils and unseen captivity of lives lived inside the lives of others. The very people who are said to be “part of the family”—maids, nannies, doormen and their children—navigate the treacherous waters of their employers’ homes, where everything is breakable, including people. In the tiny spaces where their own humanity is meant to be hidden, the specter of servitude weighs on mothers and fathers, while sons and daughters learn how to free themselves, along with their families and communities. The way Eliana Alves Cruz manages to conjure up entire lives in such a short book is astonishing—as is the implacable social undercurrent of this novel. An essential novel about class and filiation.”
—Catherine Leroux, author of The Future