Empress of the Splendid Season, Oscar Hijuelos
Empress of the Splendid Season, Oscar Hijuelos
List: $27.99 | Sale: $19.59
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Empress of the Splendid Season
A Novel

Author: Oscar Hijuelos, Elizabeth Strout

Narrator: Aida Reluzco

Unabridged: 11 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/14/2025


Synopsis

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Oscar Hijuelos brings the joys and heartbreaks of twentieth-century America vividly to life in this "tender" novel (New York Times Book Review).

Lydia España—once a wealthy, spoiled daughter of Cuba—works at a sewing factory in New York. Adjusting to her sharp change of circumstances, missing the days when her prosperous father provided her with every luxury, she ruminates on the incident that drove her away from her homeland in the late 1940s—until she falls in love with Raul, a kindhearted, working-class waiter who sees Lydia as the “Queen of the Congo Line” she used to be: the empress of "the most beautiful and splendid season, which is love.”

Despite their age difference, a loving marriage follows, as well as two children. Lydia revels in her newfound happiness, but when Raul’s health declines, she finds her fortunes reversed yet again. Now working as a cleaning lady, Lydia can’t help but contrast her experiences with those of her clients, whose secret lives and day-to-day realities are so starkly different from her own—but over time, the role may prove to be just what she needs to secure a better life for her children.

​Written with absorbing, magnetic prose, this tenderly rendered novel follows a proud, hardworking woman through the ups and downs of her life. It is Hijuelos at his masterful best, a lasting and expert portrayal of the highs and lows of chasing—and living—the “American Dream.”

Includes a Reading Group Guide.

About Oscar Hijuelos

Oscar Hijuelos, the son of Cuban immigrants, was in New York City in 1951. He is a recipient of the Rome Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. His novels -- Mambo Kings, Our House in the Last World, The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O'Brien, Mr. Ives' Christmas, Empress of the Splendid Season, and A Simple Habana Melody -- have been translated into twenty-five languages.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tara on April 08, 2010

I was enthralled with Hijuelos's upcoming release, Beautiful Maria of My Soul so when I ran across this in the library, I literally jumped up and down and made some gleeful noises. However, Hijuelos's previous work, namely this particular novel, did not live up to my expectations. Around page 125 or......more

Goodreads review by Karis on June 23, 2013

Meh. Too many short vignettes. Not enough plot or flow. Felt like I was always being distracted. Wanted Moore Cuba, less Bronx.......more

Goodreads review by Russell on June 04, 2017

I am a huge fan of Oscar Hijuelos. I love that he somehow accomplishes a Cuban rhythm that lies underneath his writing. It is as if a Caribbean breeze softly wafts a bolero constantly as I read. His novel Empress of the Spendid Season is no different: that captivating melody pervades it. And I was o......more

Goodreads review by Heli on July 29, 2014

Kirjan nimi ja kansi ovat sellaiset, etten olisi muuten tullut tarttuneeksi kirjaan, ellen olisi löytänyt sitä yliopiston kirjaston kahvilasta. Ilmeni, että nide on kiertävä BookCrossing-kirja. Otin sen mukaani, vaikka takakansiteksti oli ällöttävän adjektiivinen. Nyt kahden vuoden säilyttelyn jälke......more

Goodreads review by Roger on October 22, 2016

Hijuelos takes a discerning and compassionate look at the struggles that Cuban immigrants must face between assimilation and preserving cultural identity in his novel Empress of the Splendid Season. It tells the story of Lydia and Raul Espana, Cuban immigrants living in New York City. Lydia cleans h......more


Quotes

"A tender novel . . . This quality comes from the struggle between [Lydia's] instinct for self-invention and her inability to invent a suitable self."—New York Times Book Review

"Nobody writes better about sensual life than Hijuelos, and Empress resounds with sights, tastes, textures and even the humming ambience of deep, well-appointed brownstone apartments . . . [I]t's hard to think of a contemporary novelist who writes better about the people he knows than Hijuelos."—Los Angeles Times

“A richly narrated novel . . . explores with passion . . . the strange workings of life, love, [and] family.”—Elle

“A slow dance, an elegy to a cleaning woman that continues the author’s celebration of his Cuban roots. A character endowed with romantic yearnings, Lydia moves with stoic grace through the decades . . . Emotional fine tuning and pitch-perfect prose.” —Time

"Depicting Spanish Harlem with relentless realism, Hijuelos penetrates the lives behind the humble tenements and massive university buildings. With poignancy, he captures the lonely fear of Lydia's son as he makes his way up the ladder of American success, the apex of which is perhaps not as enviable as he and Lydia assume. Familiar Hijuelos elements—Latin music, introspective men, touches of magic realism in quietly powerful prose—render here a tender and undramatic portrait of a complex woman and her culture."—Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Well written and engrossing."—Library Journal

"The author shows himself one of our most affectionate chroniclers of the city's less favored neighborhoods as the '60s come and go, then the '70s, and as the Espaa family passes with dignity in tact through time, life, work, sorrow, and love. Sturdy truths and honest humanity in another look at life la Hijuelos."—Kirkus

"Finely detailed, funny, sweet . . . a deliberately simple story graced with the power of the ordinary."—NPR

"Hijuelos is telling a story about small people, but in his skillful hands, they carry big ideas." —USA Today

"In Hijuelos's latest work, the dream is both more soulful and more complex, made up of familial love, friendship, hard work, and, finally, an appreciation of the simple goodness in people . . . Hujuelos manages through Lydia's tale to convey the most elusive of human experiences: reconciliation to one's fate, the satisfaction of love of a good person, and the simple dignity achieved through a life of decency." —Washington Post