A Change of Skin

{{Short description|Book by Carlos Fuentes}}

{{all plot|date=July 2014}}

{{Infobox book

| italic title =

| name = A Change of Skin

| image = A Change of Skin.jpg

| image_size =

| caption =

| alt =

| author = Carlos Fuentes

| title_orig = Cambio de piel

| orig_lang_code = es

| title_working =

| translator = Sam Hileman

| illustrator =

| cover_artist =

| country = Mexico

| language = Spanish

| genre = Romance

| published = {{plainlist|

  • 1967 (J. Mortiz) (Spanish){{cite web|title=Cambio de piel|url=https://openlibrary.org/works/OL872213W/Cambio_de_piel|website=Open Library|accessdate=9 July 2014|date=3 December 2010}}
  • 1968 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) (English)}}

| media_type = Print

| pages = 442 (first edition){{cite book|title=Cambio de piel. |url=http://lccn.loc.gov/68074156 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241205073534/https://lccn.loc.gov/68074156 |url-status=dead |archive-date=5 December 2024 |via=Library of Congress Online Catalog |series=Novelistas contemporáneos |year=1967 |publisher=Library of Congress |accessdate=9 July 2014 }}

| awards =

| isbn =

| oclc = 349483

| dewey = 863

| congress = PQ7297.F793 C28

| exclude_cover =

}}

A Change of Skin (Spanish: Cambio de piel) is a 1967 novel written by Carlos Fuentes about a Mexican writer and his Jewish American wife.

Plot

This is the story about a frustrated Mexican writer named Javier, and his Jewish American wife, Elizabeth.{{cite web|title=A Change of Skin|url=http://www.enotes.com/topics/change-skin|publisher=Enotes|access-date=8 July 2014}} The couple is making their way from Mexico City to Veracruz for a vacation. A man named Franz (a Czechoslovak who helped construct the Nazi concentration camp, Theresienstadt Ghetto and thereafter fled to Mexico) is with them, along with his young Mexican mistress, Isabel.

Once the two couples have left Mexico, they visit the pre-Columbian ruins at Xochicalco and then the pyramids at Cholula. Their car is sabotaged, forcing them to spend the night in Cholula. There they are joined by the ubiquitous Narrator, who is also en route to Cholula, just to complicate matters even more.

Acclaim for the book

  • "At any rate, politically objectionable or not, Fuentes has written a challenging and interesting, if occasionally silly and pretentious, book." -David Gallagher, The New York Times{{cite news|last1=Gallagher|first1=David|title=Stifled Tiger|url=https://www.nytimes.com/books/97/10/26/home/fuente-skin.html|accessdate=8 July 2014|work=The New York Times|date=24 February 1968}}
  • "defines existentially a collective Mexican consciousness by exploring and reinterpreting the country’s myths." -Encyclopædia Britannica{{cite web|title=A Change of Skin|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/105682/A-Change-of-Skin|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica|accessdate=8 July 2014}}
  • "...human history is envisioned as an obsessively repeated mythic drama or cycle." -Edith Grossman, "Myth and Madness in Carlos Fuentes' 'A Change of Skin'"{{cite journal|last1=Grossman|first1=Edith|title=Myth and Madness in Carlos Fuentes' "A Change of Skin"|journal=Latin American Literary Review|date=1974|volume=3|issue=5|pages=99–112|jstor=20118943}}
  • It received the 1967 Premio Biblioteca Breve for best unpublished novel.{{Cite news |url=https://elpais.com/diario/2011/08/03/revistaverano/1312322408_850215.html |title=El nuevo Premio Formentor, para Carlos Fuentes |trans-title=The New Formentor Award, for Carlos Fuentes |first= Javier |last=Rodríguez Marcos |work=El País |location=Madrid |language=Spanish |date=3 August 2011 |access-date=5 September 2018}}

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}

{{Carlos Fuentes}}

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Category:1967 novels

Category:Novels by Carlos Fuentes

Category:Mexican novels