When the poet Luis Cernuda flees Spain in February of 1938, he has no
idea that he will never again set foot on his native land. In exile in
England, his former lover finds him a disheartening job that only
intensifies his feelings of bitterness and despair: caring for 3,800
refugee children who have also fled to England after the city of Bilbao
fell to Franco's army. Seventy years later, a young Mexican filmmaker
living in New York receives a mysterious email that throws his life into
complete disarray and forever links him to the famous Spanish poet. The
Family Interrupted (the title of Cernuda's only play, which had gone
missing for fifty years until Octavio Paz found it in a shoe box in his
mother's house) is, as Jorge Volpi once said, "A beautiful example of
two decanting narratives constructed with the precision and accuracy of
a watchmaker. From the opening lines, the characters' destiny
seems--almost--preordained."