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Webster University Library Book Club

The Webster University Library Book Club meets bi-monthly to discuss both fiction and non-fiction books. Join us for meaningful discussions and explore new books. Everyone is welcome!

Webster University Library Book Club

Join Us!  Webster University Book Club will meet in person in the Library Classroom (101 Edgar Road, St. Louis MO 63119) with a Zoom option for those who prefer.

  • Register for the Zoom option to get the Zoom link.
    • Meeting ID: 955 2596 5184
  • Email Julie Laramie julielaramie@webster.edu to join the Book Club email list. 

Next meeting

Monday, September 22, 2025

12 p.m. (Central time) 

Book Club read

Dreaming in Cuban by Christina García

Book Club slide for Dreaming in Cuban

About the book

"A patchwork of incident, memory, letters, dreams and visions provides glimpses of a Cuban family at home and in exile in the '70's and '80's, but Garcia's debut suffers from its fragmented style. From disparate times, places, and (mostly female) points-of- view, Garcia reveals the circumstances and inner lives of various members of the del Pino family. Widowed matriarch Celia—who loved and lost a Spaniard, then married and went crazy—still lives near Havana, fulfilled at last by her active participation in Communist activities and quasi-erotic loyalty to El L°der, Fidel Castro. Daughter Felicia—who talks like a Garc°a Lorca poem—suffers episodes of violent insanity and amnesia, then seeks healing through the African-derived religion Santer°a. Meanwhile, Felicia's twin daughters repudiate her while her son Ivanito becomes a mama's boy. Celia's son Javier works in Czechoslovakia. Daughter Lourdes fled Cuba with her husband, opened the Yankee Doodle Bakery in Brooklyn, and thrives on American life, quickly embracing cold weather, capitalism, and prejudice. Her father, Jorge (Celia's husband), who died in New York following cancer treatment, continues to manifest himself to her. Lourdes's artistic daughter Pilar paints a scandalous punk Statue of Liberty and has psychic conversations with Celia. After a Santer°a-inspired vision, Pilar convinces Lourdes to return to Cuba for a reunion. Garcia explores Cuban culture and illustrates the dislocations of a family, but the novel—told through interior visions rather than action—lacks sufficient freshness of insight to be consistently compelling."

Description from Kirkus Reviews (1992)

Check-out the book

All Webster Book Club books for 2025 are located at the Circulation Desk on Level 1. Check-out a copy today!

Book Club flyer 2025

Interested in joining other Webster University Book Club reads? 

Check out the 2025 Book Club flyer!