TY - BOOK AU - Alvarez,Julia TI - In the time of the butterflies SN - 0452274427 AV - PS3551.L845 .C67 1995 U1 - 813/.54 20 PY - 1995/// CY - New York, New York PB - Plume KW - Mirabal, María Teresa, KW - Mirabal, Minerva, KW - Mirabal, Patria, KW - Trujillo Molina, Rafael Leónidas, KW - Women revolutionaries KW - Fiction KW - Martyrs KW - Women KW - Dominican Republic KW - Fictional Works Publication Type KW - History KW - 1930-1961 KW - Historical fiction KW - gsafd N1 - I. Dedé, 1994 and circa 1943 -- Minerva, 1938, 1941, 1944 -- María Teresa, 1945 to 1946 -- Patria, 1946 -- II. Dedé, 1994 and 1948 -- Minerva, 1949 -- María Teresa, 1953 to 1958 -- Patria, 1959 -- III. Dedé, 1994 and 1960 -- Patria, January to March 1960 -- María Teresa, March to August 1960 -- Minerva, August to November 25, 1960 -- Epilogue. Dedé, 1994 -- A Postscript; 910; Lexile; Accelerated Reader; 5.8; Reading Counts!; 7.1 N2 - Set during the waning days of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republica in 1960, this extraordinary novel tells the story the Mirabal sisters, three young wives and mothers who are assassinated after visiting their jailed husbands. On a deserted mountain road in the Dominican Republic in 1960, three young women from a pious Catholic family were assassinated after visiting their husbands who had been jailed as suspected rebel leaders. The Mirabal sisters, thus martyred, became mythical figures in their country, where they are known as Las Mariposas (the butterflies). Three decades later, Julia Alvarez, daughter of the Dominican Republic and author of the acclaimed How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, brings the Mirabal sisters back to life in this extraordinary novel. Each of the sisters speaks in her own voice; beginning as young girls in the 1940s, their stories vary from hair ribbons to gun-running to prison torture. Their story is framed by their surviving sister who tells her own tale of suffering and dedication to the memory of Las Mariposas ER -