In Dancing with Butterflies, Reyna Grande renders the Mexican immigrant
experience in "lyrical and sensual" (Publishers Weekly, starred review)
prose through the poignant stories of four women brought together
through folklorico dance.Dancing with Butterflies uses the alternating
voices of four very different women whose lives interconnect through a
common passion for their Mexican heritage and a dance company called
Alegría. Yesenia, who founded Alegría with her husband, Eduardo,
sabotages her own efforts to remain a vital, vibrant woman when she
travels back and forth across the Mexican border for cheap plastic
surgery. Elena, grief-stricken by the death of her only child and the
end of her marriage, finds herself falling dangerously in love with one
of her underage students. Elena's sister, Adriana, wears the wounds of
abandonment by a dysfunctional family and becomes unable to discern love
from abuse. Soledad, the sweet-tempered illegal immigrant who designs
costumes for Alegría, finds herself stuck back in Mexico, where she
returns to see her dying grandmother. Reyna Grande has brought these
fictional characters so convincingly to life that readers will imagine
they know them.