: An exiled Russian princess who reinvents herself as a madam in Havana.
I should also consider that the user might be mistaken about the author. Daniel Chávarri is a director, not an author, so maybe they confused him with someone else. However, the title is in Spanish, and the user might be working on a Spanish project. Alternatively, the user might have a PDF they created or obtained, hence needing a written piece. Given the potential for misinformation, I should mention the uncertainty while providing a speculative piece based on available information about the director and plausible themes. Viudas De Sangre Daniel Chavarria.pdf
Catalog Record: Viudas de sangre | HathiTrust Digital Library : An exiled Russian princess who reinvents herself
In Viudas de Sangre , Vladimir’s character is defined by his duality. He is a man of simple tastes—rum, women, and tobacco—but he is thrust into complex webs of deceit usually spun by the "yumas" (foreigners) and the emerging class of Cuban hustlers (jineteros). Vladimir represents the resilience of the Cuban everyman; he is the trickster who outwits the system, not out of malice, but out of necessity. However, the title is in Spanish, and the
Viudas de sangre (1998) is arguably his most transgressive novel — a masterpiece of cynical storytelling.