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Anita de Monte Laughs Last

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New York Times bestselling author Xochitl Gonzalez delivers a mesmerizing novel about a first-generation Ivy League student who uncovers the genius work of a female artist decades after her suspicious death

1985
. Anita de Monte, a rising star in the art world, is found dead in New York City; her tragic death is the talk of the town. Until it isn’t. By 1998 Anita’s name has been all but forgotten—certainly by the time Raquel, a third-year art history student is preparing her final thesis. On College Hill, surrounded by privileged students whose futures are already paved out for them, Raquel feels like an outsider. Students of color, like her, are the minority there, and the pressure to work twice as hard for the same opportunities is no secret.

But when Raquel becomes romantically involved with a well-connected older art student, she finds herself unexpectedly rising up the social ranks. As she attempts to straddle both worlds, she stumbles upon Anita’s story, raising questions about the dynamics of her own relationship, which eerily mirrors that of the forgotten artist.

Moving back and forth through time and told from the perspectives of both women, Anita de Monte Laughs Last is a propulsive, witty examination of power, love, and art, daring to ask who gets to be remembered and who is left behind in the rarefied world of the elite.

342 pages, Hardcover

First published March 5, 2024

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About the author

Xóchitl González

2 books1,902 followers
I'm a native of Brooklyn, New York, where I was raised by my maternal grandparents in South Brooklyn. A proud graduate of the New York City public school system, I studied performing arts at Edward R. Murrow high school before getting my B.A. in Fine Art and Art History at Brown University in 1999. Nearly twenty years later, on the eve of my 40th birthday, I decided to listen to the long whispered dream of writing. I attended The Bread Loaf Writers' Conference and then was accepted to the Iowa Writers' Workshop where I was an Iowa Arts Fellow and recipient of the Michener-Copernicus Prize for Fiction. I completed my MFA in May of 2021 at the tender age of 43. Before writing I worked as an entrepreneur, consultant, wedding planner, fund-raiser, tarot reader and writer of etiquette columns. I currently live back in Brooklyn with my dog Hectah Lavoe.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,443 reviews
March 15, 2024
3.5 stars rounded down - After reading and loving the author’s “Olga Dies Dreaming”, I was really, really looking forward to “Anita De Monte Laughs Last” but I felt rather let down by it and overall just pretty “blah” and “meh” about this book. The concept was great here but the execution just didn’t work for me, way too wordy & sort of pretentious, so after several days of struggling to make real headway on it I just skimmed to get to an ending on these very complex characters. There’s a lot of (intended) misogyny and racism on display here - both the art world & Ivy League are on notice, but some of the scenes were really a bit OTT, as was the whole supernatural angle so for me this one’s sadly a miss. Many, many other reviewers have loved it though, so do check out their reviews to decide if it’s for you.
Profile Image for Alwynne.
728 reviews945 followers
March 1, 2024
On September 8th, 1985, Cuban American artist Ana Mendieta plunged to her death from the window of a 34th floor apartment in Greenwich Village. Alone inside the apartment was her art star husband, minimalist sculptor Carl Andre. Andre was tried and acquitted for Mendieta’s murder, after a brief lull, his career continued to thrive. The narrative spun by Andre – and the white, art establishment who quickly closed ranks against Mendieta – was that his wife was unstable, an “hysterical Hispanic” who likely sacrificed herself because of her bizarre beliefs. Then, and now, successive feminist groups have worked to challenge this image of Mendieta, a pioneering performance and Land artist. And there have been fierce protests against the “not guilty” verdict awarded to Andre.

Xochitl Gonzalez’s novel is a reimagining of the life, and afterlife, of Mendieta, here reframed as Anita de Monte married to older, iconic artist Jack Martin. Gonzalez builds on themes of history, memory, culture and the body that were key to Mendieta’s work. Gonzalez also draws on aspects of her own background through the character of Raquel Toro – who like Gonzalez – leaves her home in Brooklyn to study art history at an upscale, predominantly-white university. Gonzalez's story parallels Anita’s experiences in the 1980s with Raquel’s in the late 1990s. A move that provides the space for Gonzalez to tackle broader issues around art, women and ethnicity, and the white men whose work has dominated art history. In addition, Gonzalez explores culture shock, economic and class divides alongside domestic abuse and coercive control. It’s an ambitious, sometimes passionate piece, a work centred on cultural reclamation and cultural resistance, but Gonzalez’s emphasis on immediacy and storytelling manages to make it accessible and relatable.

Raquel is a particularly sympathetic figure, desperately staving off a stream of microaggressions, caught between worlds, no longer sure who she is or what she wants. Initially swayed by her white professor’s obsessive regard for Jack Martin’s work, it’s only when she uncovers Martin’s past and the near-buried work of Anita de Monte that she’s finally able to make sense of her own situation. I loved the ideas, and the barely-suppressed rage, driving Gonzalez’s story but some of her creative choices didn’t entirely convince me. The inclusion of Jack’s voice allowed Gonzalez to recreate the aftermath of Mendieta’s death, as well as the ways in which his position as sole inheritor of her work stifled her legacy – definite echoes of Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath here. But I think many of the episodes featuring Jack might’ve been better left to the imagination. He often felt too much like a stock villain which sometimes undermined the overall force of the narrative. I liked too the image of Anita as a spectre haunting Jack and the New York artworld which so callously discarded her and her work. However, Gonzalez’s plot twist involving Anita’s transformation into something akin to a creature of the night was a step too far for me. But, flaws aside, this was a fairly compelling read, frequently moving and thought-provoking.

Thanks to Netgalley and publisher Bloomsbury for an ARC

Rating: 3 to 3.5
Profile Image for rachel.
290 reviews11 followers
April 3, 2024
Writing-wise, this book deserves a much higher rating than I gave it. However. I refuse to give a high rating to this book because Ana Mendieta's family --of whom this book was heavily inspired-- wasn't consulted and did not appreciate how Ana's legacy was framed within this book.

Don't get me wrong. Conversations on institutionalized racism, misogyny, and the detriment of stereotypes need to be discussed. Just not at the expense of a real person, especially against a family's wishes.

Let me make this clear: "Anita de Monte" of ANITA DE MONTE LAUGHS LAST is actually a real-life artist, Ana Mendieta. Who, coincidentally, is not named ONCE in this book. Not in the dedication. Not in the foreword. Not even in the acknowledgments.

This is truly ironic considering that a large portion of Anita de Monte Laughs Last is the concept of Anita's legacy and intellectual property. There are even multiple conversations that are meant to examine how marginalized groups/Latina women are erased from the art world, all while effectively doing the same to Ana’s legacy. Throw in the them of how wrong it is that “Anita’s” legacy is being controlled by people who are not her family and don't have her best interests at heart? Utterly hypocritical.

Before reading this, I would encourage everyone to read this New York Times article, which is not-so-coincidentally titled: "Cuban Artist Ana Mendieta's Family Fights to Tell Her Story."

And, in the case that you don't want to read it/can't get past the paywall, here are the highlights:
1) Ana's niece was quoted saying that her family is "forced to relive [Ana's] death over and over again, but [they] have no say in how [Ana] is being portrayed."
2) Her family thought the likeness between Ana and Anita was so profound that they were worried about the line being blurred between fact and fiction.
3) Xóchitl González did not contact Mendieta's family at any point before, during, or after writing and selling this novel.
4) The marketing materials portray Ana/Anita as being "forgotten", a notion that her family has long been protesting.

Although there is a lot I could say about the book itself, I want to use this space instead to highlight some pieces of Ana Mendieta's legacy, since Xóchitl González couldn't be bothered to do it herself:

Ana Mendieta's website Set Up By Her Estate
MoMA's spotlight on Ana Mendieta
The Guggenheim's Remembrance of Ana
A Great (& Short) Video Essay on the Life and Art of Ana Mendieta
Profile Image for Avery Desmond.
2 reviews4 followers
February 17, 2024
I don’t understand how the author has used the story of Ana Mendieta — essentially just swapping her name as Anita. Is her family involved in this project? I doubt it. It’s just so odd to me that you’re taking all the details of her life and making them into a fictional story without any reference to the real Ana Mendieta. I mean, you have every detail down to the way she died, to the type of art (Anita) makes. I found this to be problematic— how is this not just perpetuating the very same cycle Ana Mendieta was forced into when she was alive? Having people philosophize and consume her work, but actually dismiss her as a woman/person?
Did you just listen to the podcast, Death of an Artist and write it all down with the name Anita instead?
Profile Image for Su Kim.
62 reviews
November 25, 2023
I loved this one even more than I did Olga Dies Dreaming. This author is so incredibly adept at weaving stories from different perspectives, and epitomizes the fact that the oppressed always know the oppressor best (I was pacing to gear up for any chapter of Jack’s). This absolutely cements Xochitl Gonzalez as an auto-buy author for me.
Profile Image for Mai.
330 reviews422 followers
March 25, 2024
The Diverse Baseline

February Prompt B: An Historical Fiction book by a BIPOC author

I spent most of this book horrified at the mirrored stories of white men with their Latina partners who they treated unfairly and unequally. In 1985, artist Anita de Monte is found dead from a "fall" in New York. She is with her husband, Jack Martin, another famous artist, at the time.

Later, in 1998, Raquel walks these same streets in her own unequal relationship, studying Jack's work for her thesis. Jack is taught and revered at university as a living legend. No mention is made of his being on trial for his wife's death.

The last twenty minutes were gripping. Raquel finally, for lack of a better phrase, gets her shit together, and pivots her thesis to include and focus on Anita. While I enjoy a tale of BIPOC women redemption, at times, it felt too little too late, as we spend the majority of the novel drowning in the story of these women's relationships with men who don't value them.

🎧 NetGalley
Profile Image for Kate O'Shea.
803 reviews76 followers
February 5, 2024
Truly, 5 is not enough stars for this book.

The story follows two strands - Anita de Monte is a Cuban artist who is married to Jack Martin. Anita is wild, free, passionate and at the beginning of her career whereas Jack is a brutalist/minimalist sculptor who is at the height of his. However as Anita's star begins to rise Jack becomes increasingly critical and then violent which erupts tragically one night, the consequence of which is that Anita goes "out the window" to her death. Suicide or murder?

The second strand follows Raquel, an art history student desperate to fit in at her Ivy League college. She thinks her prayers have been answered when Nick Fitzsimmons notices her. Nick's family are so establishment they might as well have come over on the Mayflower.

History begins to repeat itself as Raquel tries to fit into Nick's world by erasing her whole identity. But will writing her thesis about Jack Martin change the Raquel's new version of herself.

So at this point I should say a quick thankyou to another GR reviewer who has pointed me to an artist called Ana Mendieta who I had never heard of (nor had I heard of her husband, Carl Andre) or their story on which this book is so clearly based. So thankyou, Jessica Woodbury.

I can't think of many things I like so much in s novel as to be so engaged in the story that I talk to the characters. I did that almost constantly throughout this exceptional novel.

I loved it even though it absolutely drove me crazy to see these women twisting themselves into pretzels to be what their men wanted them to be. I'm not sure I've been quite this engaged or enraged by a book in a long time. Xóchitl Gonzàlez's characters bounce off the page. The writing is visceral, brutal amd emotive. It forces you to confront domestic abuse and coercive control head on.

It's an absolutely brilliant piece of work that's had me fumbling about to learn more about the work of Ana Mendieta. And for that alone I'd thank the author. However I thank her more for giving me a book to really sink my teeth into.

Very highly recommended.

Thanks so much to Netgalley and Bloomsbury for the advance review copy. I'm going to do some deep breathing to calm down now.
Profile Image for Jessica Woodbury.
1,728 reviews2,492 followers
February 3, 2024
Perhaps it's unusual for a book's title to tell you how it ends, but I was so glad this book did. I needed to know Anita was going to laugh last because it sure doesn't feel like it's going to work out for her for much of the book. I appreciated the reassurance that it was all going to end well for Anita (and our other protagonist, Raquel) so I could sit back and enjoy the journey. And it's a fun journey! Turns out being dead has its perks.

The parallel plots here are more than just echoes, more than just stories that will intertwine. It's not just that Anita and Raquel are both Latina and navigating an unfamiliar upper class mostly white world. It's also that Raquel finds starting exactly the kind of relationship that was the end of Anita.

Unlike González's debut novel, Olga Dies Dreaming, which had a complex plot with a lot of nuance around politics and class, this book is simple. That isn't necessarily a bad thing, but it is different. It's doing one thing, even with its parallel plots both women encounter similar obstacles. And sometimes here González tends to just name the theme and the point she wants to make instead of just showing it to you. All that said, it does what it does well. If sometimes it's unclear why Anita was with Jack in the first place, Raquel's plot lets us fill in the blanks, lets us understand the attraction. And once again González takes the bold step of letting a terrible white man be not only a primary focus but get to have his own first person point of view chapters, a risky move but one she executes really well.

Sometimes books about artists can feel empty, like we're supposed to imagine this great art that doesn't feel like all that much. But here González does a fantastic job helping us visualize the works of Anita and of Jack, understanding what their work means to them and to the broader art world. It's one of the best novels to imagine art that I can recall. (Note: okay so maybe it's not completely imagining art. Anita de Monte is clearly a fictional version of Ana Mendieta, their names are practically anagrams. Their early lives are different, though both are Cuban. But Mendieta's work is similar to what González creates for Anita and Mendieta's death was in virtually identical circumstances. Once I realized this I thought it was a beautiful homage, an opportunity to reintroduce a generation to an artist. The audio version I listened to didn't include any of this but I hope the print does, I was glad to know it!)

I read this on audio and really recommend it. The readers are both good, but Anita's reader in particular brings so much life and personality to her. Sometimes an over the top delivery in audio can feel like too much but here it feels perfect for Anita, who is naturally over the top.
Profile Image for Karli.
49 reviews3 followers
March 20, 2024
*Minor spoilers below*

Ana Mendieta was a Cuban-American performance artist in the 1980s. Her career was gaining traction when, in 1985, she fell from the window of her 34th-floor NY apartment. The only other person in the apartment at the time was her husband. He was charged with her murder, but less than a year later, he was acquitted of the charges.

This is the story that inspired Anita de Monte Laughs Last.

PLOT
Anita de Monte is living in America with her celebrated artist husband, Jack Martin. But their marriage is fraught with tension and resentment -- Jack does not respect anitas work as an artist and instead expects her to be the perfect little wife; nothing but a piece of his well cultivated persona. When Anita's work starts getting more notice and acclaim, Jack begins to grow increasingly jealous.

Fast forward to the year 1998, Anita de Monte is all but forgotten. Enter Raquel, an art history student working on her thesis at a very prestigious university. Raquel often feels like a bit of an outsider, she is a minority at the school and did not come from the same privileged upbringing as most of her classmates.

While attending an art exhibit for a friend, Raquel meets Nick, a fellow student and rising star in the art world. The two become inseparable.

All the while the ghost of Anita is trapped without power and without hope. An artist puts pieces of their soul into their art; when their art is alive, so are they. But Anita's art has not been alive in over a decade, instead hidden away in storage lockers and basements, put there by her husband. She waits for the day when her art (her 'babies' as she calls them) will be seen and appreciated once again.

PEOPLE
In Anita de Monte Laughs Last we follow three separate POVs: Anita, Raquel and Jack

I loved Anita. She was ANRGY -- and who can blame her? I was angry too. I listened to the audio version of this and I thought the narrator who voiced Anita was spot on. I saw some reviews that thought she was a little *intense* but I ATE. IT. UP. Anita was angry. she wanted revenge. she wanted her life back. The way she was narrated reflected that. <-- all that being said, maybe turn down the volume during Anita's POV if you listen to the audio.

I thought Jack's POV was really interesting, and again the narrator was talented, but sometimes Jacks villainy was borderline caricature-ish. He said all the villain like things and thought all the villain like thoughts. the only thing missing was a swivel chair and a dramatic cackle. Still, I liked the hauntings from his perspective. I don't think they would have felt as spooky told from a different POV.

And lastly we have Raquel. The problem I had with Raquel was the number of times she made me want to shake her and scream "GET YOUR HEAD OUT OF YOUR BOYFRIENDS ASS". It was so frustrating to watch her be controlled and belittled CONSTANTLY. But her experience is actually a reality for a lot of women, and that is partly why its so damn frustrating. We see her loosing herself in this relationship, prioritizing him over her, trying to mold herself into *his* perfect woman. AND IT MADE ME SO MAD. And

FINAL THOUGHTS
This is a great revenge story. Its a great haunting story. But it's also a great story about the struggle to fit into a world that does not accept you, and finding pride within yourself and your roots.

I Recommend this book if you like:
Contemporary Art
Hip Hop
Revenge
Hauntings
Female Rage

TW:
death
murder
eating disorders
domestic abuse
coercive control


Siri play “Little Girl Gone” by Chinchilla

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the arc
Profile Image for Isabel.
47 reviews9 followers
March 8, 2024
This novel explores the life of Anita de Monte, an emerging artist whose untimely death in 1985 New York City becomes a forgotten tragedy, and Raquel, an Ivy League art history student who, decades later, uncovers Anita's work while grappling with her own place in a world that feels alien to her. Both women are dynamic, complicated, and deeply rooted in their cultures despite what the art world demands of them.

The writing is so smart and emotionally intelligent. Not to mention that I love an obviously well-researched book. Gonzalez crafts a narrative rich with themes of ambition, identity, and the relentless pursuit of recognition in spaces marred by systemic bias. Only by reading other reviews now have I learned the book is a reimagining of the life (and afterlife) of Ana Mendieta. I, too, hope she is expressly recognized in the written book.

The three points of view—Anita, Raquel, and Jack (trigger warning: DV)—are done so well by the narrators—Jessica Pimentel, Stacy Gonzalez, and Jonathan Gregg, respectively. Their clear skill and connection with the characters (not you Johnathan, pls, I'm begging that you share nothing with Jack) brought it up to 5 ⭐️ for me.

Thanks to Netgalley, Macmillan Audio, Xóchitl González, Jessica Pimentel, Stacy Gonzalez, and Jonathan Gregg for the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Lydia Wallace.
412 reviews65 followers
February 21, 2024
What a great book. Well written and a easy read that keeps you turning the pages. Anita de Monte is a young, beautiful Cuban American artists living in 1980s New York City and her career is set to take off just as that of her modern art titan husband's seems to be declining. When she dies an unexpected death the book takes a haunting and beautiful turn. Sort of a supernatural turn. Full of suspense and worth reading. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Dylan Kakoulli.
617 reviews95 followers
February 16, 2024
Oh how I really wanted to like this book. But the more I reflect on my time spent (wasted? mmm maybe too harsh) reading, the more I find myself disengaged and disinterested in our (far too long) time spent together.

Anita de Monte Laughs Last is definitely an interesting premise for a book -a supposedly reverting and immersive look at the misogynistic and racist underbelly (though let’s face it, it’s pretty obvious to those on the “outside” aka anyone that’s not a white man) of the art world. However it’s execution left very little to be desired, and was rather lukewarm and disappointingly unoriginal in its telling.

Not only were both storylines (as Gonzales attempts to create dual narrative here) boringly predictable -no thanks to the fact that both narratives and characters essentially reflected the same thing (and before you point out that that’s part of the point “history repeating itself” etc, I do get that, but it far too overt for my liking). No for me it mainly came down to the characters themselves. Who all felt sadly superficial and stereotypical in their portrayal -and I mean ALL characters; Latina, black and white here.

If you’re looking for an easy -maybe YA/“Beach” kinda read (not that there’s anything wrong with either of those types of books -they definitely have a time and a place, just not my time and/or place lol), then this may be the perfect pick for you.

2/2.5 sluggish stars

PS - thanks again to the publishers for sending me a copy though :)
April 13, 2024
Shame on this author, shame, shame, shame. I read this book and came here to give it a good review BUT when I saw the other reviews and learned about Ana Mendieta, well TBH, it disappointed me so and made me sad and angry. Why? Because in this book one of the central story lines is about how after Anita De Monte's death, her husband attempts to erase her from the art world and this book, this book....grrrrr, gimme a moment.

This book is based on Ana Mendieta's life story and it does exactly the same to her by not mentioning her, not acknowledging her but using her story, so much of her story...how is this not the same abhorrent behavior of the husband that we as the reader are supposed to find so objectionable? Had I not read the other Goodreads reviews that sent me looking for more information I would be none the wiser that there was a Cuban Artist named Ana Mendieta that met an untimely death from falling from the 34th floor of her NYC apartment, and her husband, a minimalist sculptor was accused and acquitted of her murder.

The book's dedication is: In memory of Ana. And all the women who endured solitude never knowing the rest of us were out there.. Why not include her last name? Shame on this author for co-opting this tragic tale and not shining a light on the woman whose story is at the core of her book.

Don't get me wrong, I don't have a problem with the author using Ana's story to build upon to create her own fictional story, the issue is the not acknowledging that a giant chunk of her "fictional" story is drawn from a tragically true story. And her fictionalization runs dangerously parallel to Ana Mendeta's real life story and her artistic endeavors, down to the very descriptions of the art used in the novel. And this lack of acknowledgment, well instead of casting light on this artist and her art just keeps her in the darkened shadows, and this is just one more tragedy to add to Ana Mendieta's tale.

Look it up, it is all out there and easily confirmable.
Profile Image for Lisa.
45 reviews
March 6, 2024
I would have preferred to read a biography of Ana Mendieta instead.
Profile Image for Sarah.
495 reviews4 followers
March 7, 2024
I'd like to thank Netgalley for an advanced listener copy of this novel. The opinions expressed below are entirely my own.

Recently, the NYT published an article about the actual artist that this book is based on, Ana Mendieta. (https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/02/st...) I have included the relevant bits below for those who can't access it, but I suggest looking into Ana Mendieta herself, since she's the one who deserves recognition.

In the article, it states that, "Lately, the Ana Mendieta estate is concerned about two new projects. ... And this month, Xochitl Gonzalez will publish “Anita de Monte Laughs Last,” a novel that follows an art history student who feels an uncanny connection to a Cuban performance artist named Anita who fell 33 stories from her New York City apartment in 1985.

Reading an advance copy of the book last fall, Ms. Mendieta noticed that several details in Anita de Monte’s back story appeared to correspond with her aunt’s. The likeness was so profound, she said, that the “line between fact and fiction” was blurred.

Ms. Gonzalez, who is of Puerto Rican and Mexican descent, said she felt as if she shared a “cultural lineage” with Ana Mendieta when she discovered her work as an art student at Brown University in the 1990s. Her character Anita was meant to be a homage to the artist, she said, not a direct analogue: After Anita falls in the book, she turns into a bat.

Ms. Mendieta protested the notion that her aunt was “forgotten” in the ’90s, a characterization of the fictional Anita de Monte included in the book’s marketing materials. And she was frustrated that Ms. Gonzalez had not contacted the estate before writing, and then selling, her novel."


In fact, there is no afterword given that acknowledges that this book is entirely based on Ana Mendieta - from her husband to the very clear descriptions of her art. I wouldn't have known about this if it hadn't been for the reviews on Goodreads pointing out the similarities and the NYT article. I would have expected Gonzalez to try bring light to Ana Mendieta and her tragic death instead of writing something that feels as if she is sensationalizing it and using it for her own profit.

Two stars for helping me find out about Ana Mendieta.
Profile Image for Amber.
510 reviews57 followers
February 12, 2024
Thanks to the publisher for the gifted ALC & ARC

1985. A rising artist, Anita de Monte, is found dead in New York City under suspicious circumstances. By 1998, her name has been largely forgotten. But when Raquel, a third-year art history student preparing for her thesis, stumbles upon Anita's story, she questions the dynamics of her relationship that eerily mirrors the late artist's.

Following two Latinx women in the art & academia across a decade, González brilliantly explores the psychological burden of Brown women surviving in white-dominant spaces and their conscious/unconscious need for white validation.

The dual timeline works well in juxtaposing Anita & Raquel's struggles and exposes how little has changed for women of color to move through institutions built to uphold white supremacy. From microaggressions and sexism to the false belief of meritocracy, my heart especially aches for all that Raquel has to endure.

While some chapters are a little on the nose, I love the unexpected twist that portrays Anita as the ultimate unhinged woman. The sharp, sarcastic writing keeps me engaged and rooting for Anita to exact her revenge. LAST reminds me of DISORIENTATION (Elaine Hsieh Chou), YELLOWFACE (R.F. Kuang), and THE TREES (Percival Everett), and I loved every moment of it.

The full-cast audiobook is phenomenal and captures each character's emotions & personalities perfectly. Reading LAST is noticing the simmering rage within me threatening to boil over; I laughed, I raged, and I think you will too.
Profile Image for Yelena Gitlin Nesbit.
5 reviews5 followers
March 7, 2024
She’s done it again. Whether you’re already a fan of Gonzalez’s work (Olga Dies Dreaming, her commentary pieces for The Atlantic, etc) or you’re new here, this book will ensure you’re a fan for life. Anita de Monte is a young, beautiful Cuban American artists living in 1980s NYC and her career is set to take off—just as that of her modern art titan husband’s seems to be cooling. When she dies an untimely death (not a spoiler, I promise!), the book takes a haunting, beautiful, supernatural-ish turn. Anita’s story intertwines with that Raquel, a first-generation Nuyorican student at an elite New England college in the 1990s. The two stories begin to intersect as Raquel starts work on her art history senior thesis. Gonzalez perfectly captures her native New York and the art world of the 80s, as we well as campus life and the racial and class divisions that shaped it during that time. While the book tackles serious topics, the story never feels heavy (in fact, there are even a number of very funny parts)—the balance is perfect, the world-building is spot on and the characters are unforgettable. And you will never look at bats the same way again!
Profile Image for Toya (thereadingchemist).
1,299 reviews136 followers
April 17, 2024
Quick thoughts: Damn! This was such an incredible read that centers the power of female rage from Latinx women who are given scraps by white America and expected to be thankful.

This story unfolds in dual timelines. One timeline (1985) follows Anita de Monte, a rising star in the art world whose life meets a tragic and unjust end. The other timeline (1998) follows Raquel, a brown art student in a sea of white who learns of Anita’s story, which mirrors so much of her own.⁣

Don’t let this character driven plot fool you, I flew through these pages as I was desperate to find out more about Anita and her rage that was palpable from start to finish. ⁣

Anita is an incredible character, and I wanted to burn down the world for her. Her passion is infectious, and I love that Gonzalez doesn’t care whether the audience loves her or not. Raquel is the antithesis of Anita at first, but when she really dives into the injustice of Anita’s story, she becomes an absolute force in her own right. ⁣

Gonzalez does an incredible job of examining the question of who gets to have their stories glorified in history versus who gets left behind…and of course, you know which side the upper echelon will always choose. ⁣

While this book may want you to scream and throw things, it’s impeccably written and worth the emotions. ⁣

Thank you Flatiron Books and Macmillan Audio for providing a review copy.
Profile Image for Shelby (allthebooksalltheways).
725 reviews119 followers
March 7, 2024
AUDIOBOOK REVIEW: Historical fiction / murder mystery

Thank you #partner @macmillan.audio for my #gifted audiobook

Anita De Monte Laughs Last
Xochitl Gonzalez

Listen.... this might be a controversial statement, but there are some books that are just better on audio, and this is one of them! 🙌🏼 And that's not to say this book isn't excellent in its own right, because it absolutely is, but hot damn! This book + this audiobook performance = outstanding!!!!

📖 In Gonzalez's sophomore novel, we're introduced to two Latina artists, in two seperate timelines over a decade apart, as they make their mark within a world that makes them work twice as hard for half as much.

📌 Swipe to read more

💭 This book is bold, fiery, feminist, and I L.O.V.E.D. it! I loved the combination of an 80s-90s murder mystery with dark academia vibes, as well as the important social commentary on sexism, racism, tokenism, and privilege within the art world. Gonzalez triumphantly examines the racialized and genderized power dynamics in relationships, specifically within art and art commerse. She bases this book, in part, on her own experiences at Brown University, and on a real life case that mirrors Anita's.

I loved Olga Dies Dreaming, but this one is spectacular!

🎧 The icing on the proverbial cake is the dynamic cast of narrators who performed their asses off! Such emotion! I could feel Jessica Pimentel's rage seeping through my headphones! 🔥 Friends, if you listen to audiobooks, you don't want to sleep on this one.

Narrators:
• Stacy Gonzalez
• Jessica Pimentel
• Johnathan Gregg

📌 Available now!

📌 @reesesbookclub & @bookofthemonth pick!
Profile Image for Lizzy Brannan.
74 reviews14 followers
March 19, 2024
This story is so unusually captivating and dramatic. After I discovered the plot connecting about 70% of the way through, I was hooked.

In it's nonlinear timeline, we learn the stories of artists Anita De Monte (1980's) and Raquel (1990's). Raquel is an Ivy League student who already feels out of place because of her nationality. She is tasked with doing her thesis on artist, Jack Martin and his minimalist work. After discovering a time gap in his artwork, Raquel learns he was married to a beautiful hispanic artist named Anita De Monte. Anita De Monte was allegedly pushed out the window at a party...... by her husband. They have had a dysfunctional marriage, to say the least. Anita has had to work extra hard to make it as a thriving artist because of her gender and nationality. Jack Martin has money and is well known, so he married Anita to help her come up in the world. It was a marriage doomed from the start though. They never really got along and there was much jealousy leading to hostility between them. After death, we meet Anita in various forms through her ability to subtly make her presence known to those who were active in her life. Anita De Monte will not go quietly. She WILL have the last laugh.

I struggled with this one. It really was good. I may not have had the mental capacity to connect the dots while reading it. Each chapter focused on the daily events of either Jack Martin, Anita De Monte, or Raquel. Not reading the synopsis beforehand, I had no idea Raquel was connected with Anita in ANY way.....until the end. Most of the writing did not propel the plot and I honestly found Anita De Monte to be completely annoying as a character. Her character was CONSTANTLY complaining, angry, and often unreasonable in statements made. Though her afterlife was very entertaining and the connecting of her to Raquel was brilliant, I was turned off by having to wait 70% of the way through the book to figure out an actual story being built. I kept thinking "this is definitely a 2-star for me" until I got to where Raquel discovered her. I don't know.... it's probably just me. So many people love it. What helped me immensely was the narration by Stacy Gonzalez, Jessica Pimentel, and Jonathan Gregg. WOW they were spectacular. I LOVED listening to their voicing and interpretation of characters.
Overall, I think this book deserves accolades for the edification of minorities. I wanted to read this to stand in Anita's shoes. Maybe I can try again one day to see if my mindset was the problem .
785 reviews19 followers
March 10, 2024
Yes, it’s (at least in part) a fictional take on the life and death of the artist Ana Mendieta, and I understand why that’s problematic for many readers/reviewers…but I found the novel to be thoughtful, meaningful, and a fully engaging read. It’s not especially subtle, and some readers will balk at the author’s choices regarding the multiple narrative voices…none of this bothered me. Every once in a while, a more or less uncomplicated happy ending (not a spoiler…check out the title!) is okay by me. This was both entertaining and, ultimately, uplifting.
Profile Image for Adi.
70 reviews
March 14, 2024
I think using a real person’s tragic story and writing a fictionalized version of it is one thing but I think adding the violent husband’s pov was…icky? It feels disrespectful and I wonder if Ana Mendieta’s family was involved in this? I failed to see how this fictionalized version of her life honors her in any way. The parallel to Raquel’s life also felt neither here nor there to me, especially bc she doesn’t learn about Anita until towards the end lol, and I think whatever message this was trying to send about artists of color navigating a white majority art world feels very dated. Like what is the author actually trying to say here? I think this author just generally isn’t for me and this book solidified that.
Profile Image for Paula W.
444 reviews77 followers
January 4, 2024
I was provided an advanced listening copy of the audiobook by the author/publisher in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own. Publication 3/4/2024.

Who gets to leave a legacy?
Moving back and forth through time and told from the perspectives of two Latina women, Anita de Monte Laughs Last is a propulsive, witty examination of power, love, and art, daring to ask who gets to be remembered and who is left behind in the rarefied world of the elite.

From the same author whose debut novel “Olga Dies Dreaming” took the world by storm, this is another book from the Latina perspective trying to find her way in the world and find her confidence in herself. I didn’t like this as much as I liked the first one, but it could possibly be the audio narration. The narration wasn’t bad, but it was so overly dramatized at times. Sometimes that was fine, like when narrating the petite, dramatic, passionate Cuban artist (but even that was a bit much in places). Sometimes it wasn’t fine because even the narration of the other characters found its way over the top often. Still, definitely worth a read. Trigger warnings: domestic violence, murder, emotional abuse, physical abuse, racism, gaslighting, and fragile male egos. 3.5 stars
Profile Image for Madalyn (Novel Ink).
557 reviews877 followers
March 10, 2024
i really enjoyed the magical realism elements in this book, and i found myself captivated by the story once the two timelines/characters intersected, but i wish the two narratives had been woven together sooner. raquel was an excellent main character, but i almost wish this book had been more of her pov and less of anita’s (and, honestly, that jack’s pov had been omitted entirely). i did love the glimpse into the art world this book gave me!
Profile Image for thecriticalreader.
59 reviews3 followers
March 18, 2024
1.5 stars

TL;DR:So disappointing! Anita de Monte Laughs Last by Xóchitl González is another well-written, captivating read that I gave a low rating to because the author appropriates a real life person's story (Ana Mendieta) and tragedy without acknowledgment.

Anita de Monte Laughs Last follows two timelines. The first follows the titular Anita de Monte, an upcoming Cuban American artist in a fractious marriage with Jack Martin, a minimalist darling in the art world. Jack’s cruel narcissism and Anita’s strong sense of self-worth clash repeatedly, until one day Anita is found dead after a fall from their New York City apartment in 1985. The second timeline takes place in the late 1990s from the perspective of Raquel, an art history student at Brown University who is eager to find her place in the elite art world. Raquel chooses to write her thesis on Jack Martin but discovers the forgotten art and life of Anita de Monte in the process, changing her life trajectory.

The chapters from Raquel’s perspective are the strongest part of the story. Raquel’s life, perspective, and relationships are fleshed out and vibrant; González expertly builds the world around her and explores how that world’s exclusivity, xenophobia, and racism negatively affects Raquel’s career and personal life. The little details make this story come to life, and it’s clear that it comes from a place that is close to the author’s heart and experiences. Through Raquel’s work in the art world, the book also makes some interesting points about culture, art, and storytelling.

Anita’s chapters are captivating due to González’s strong writing style, but something about Anita’s character feels off to me. Anita is significantly less developed as a character than Raquel; despite the book’s repeated assertions that Anita’s Cuban identity and past profoundly shape her character and her work, these elements remain blurry and underdeveloped. I looked up reviews of this book on GoodReads and discovered that Anita’s story is directly inspired by the true life and death of Cuban American artist Ana Mendieta, right down to the small details about Anita’s life and work. (Thank you to Avery Desmond and emma and for bringing this to my attention in their reviews! I would tag y'all if I knew how to do so)

This is a problem for two reasons.

One, González never makes it clear to the reader that Anita’s story is a fictional retelling of a real-life tragedy. Nowhere in this book does it say that it was inspired by real people and events, and the author does not mention Mendieta by her full name; the most she gets is a quick first-name mention in the dedication. Which is so fucking weird, especially since one of the book’s biggest morals is how important it is to remember the names and contributions of women of color in art, especially for people like Anita, who were victimized and mistreated in their life and death. So why does it feel like González is intentionally deceiving her audience and burying the real story of Ana Mendieta?

Two, González is a non-Cuban author fictionalizing the story of a real Cuban American person, and it shows. Her depictions of Cuba and Anita’s Cuban-ness feel way more stereotypical and flat compared to Raquel’s. The book asserts that Anita is more than just a “spicy Cuban” stereotype, but ultimately, that’s all she really gets to be in the story. The author relegates her background, family life, and relationship to Cuba to just a handful of sentences, and almost all we see of Anita are moments where she’s angry, spiteful, or vengeful. That’s not to say that Anita doesn’t have a good reason for her anger, but I think a Cuban author who truly felt strongly about doing service to Ana’s story would do a much better job at crafting a fully realized character. Again, González’s choice to write Anita clashes with the values espoused in the book, which makes clear the perils of divorcing art from a person’s cultural background. Why did González feel like she was the right person to tell Ana Mendieta’s story, and why doesn’t she even acknowledge that she’s telling it?

I’m so disappointed, because Raquel’s story could have stood on its own as this book’s only narrative. As I said earlier, Raquel’s chapters are well-written, powerful, and engaging. González wouldn’t need to change anything about Raquel’s story, except to replace the name “Anita de Monte” with “Ana Mendieta” and mention the real-life artist in an author’s note. But because González decided to appropriate a historical tragedy without acknowledgment, this book left a bad taste in my mouth.


Profile Image for Trina.
892 reviews3,916 followers
April 6, 2024
This was an incredibly slow start, taking over half the book for events in the blurb to start happening and the main POVs didn't have anything to do with each other until nearly the end. The final quarter was really good though. There were sections from Anita's POV and her husband's, that while happening in the same time frame, were told out of order in a way that confused me. It didn't serve a narrative purpose, just seemed scattered. For instance, Anita would narrate day 3, and then Jack would narrate a party that happened on day 2, and next Anita was explaining days 1 and 2, which we already knew about. There was also no satisfaction regarding Jack's storyline.

What I LOVED most was the commentary on how, often, when white men are teaching the classes, women and BIPOC get left out of the story altogether.
Profile Image for Meike.
1,681 reviews3,591 followers
Want to read
April 8, 2024
Sounds fascinating, let's check it out!
Profile Image for Jinny.
279 reviews13 followers
March 13, 2024
Goodreads says 1/5 stars is "didn't like it" and 2/5 stars is "it was ok". So if those are my choices, I am unfortunately going to go with the 1/5 stars. I read this for Reese's Book Club, and I am sorry but this book was sooooo boring. The premise sounded interesting, but the execution was not.

The story involves dual timelines, one about Anita -- a Cuban artist, a rising star in the art world -- and the other about Raquel, an art history student. Their stories are separated by 10 or 15 years. Their stories are very similar to one another, as they deal with the difficulties of being a minority woman in a space historically dominated by white male artists and scholars. The two women are also in relationships with men who are jealous of the women's talents. I think the point of the two storylines is to show how history repeats itself, but it just felt like I was reading the same story twice.

The two characters are also unaware of each other's existence for most of the book, which added to the feeling of reading two separate but similar stories. It was about 2/3 into the book when Raquel is made aware of Anita. It's only at the very end when their stories become more intertwined.

I also wasn't a fan of the women vs men, white people vs minorities, rich vs poor themes in the story. Can you guess which sides were considered the bad guys and which were considered good guys? No nuances here.

But the biggest thing is that overall, this was just boring to read. I think the writing was very good, but it was difficult to see this through to the end. I did it, but it wasn't enjoyable.

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