Mario reads to Neruda telegrams that he has received offering the poet sanctuary, but it is too late-Neruda knows he is dying and gives his last words, a poem, to Mario. As helicopters circle the area, Mario sneaks into to Neruda's house, to find the poet dying in his bed. The revolution reaches Isla Negra, and Mario takes up his job as postman in order to see Neruda. Unable to see Neruda, Mario decides to send in a pencil sketch of his son. Neruda, unbeknownst to Mario, however, is on his death bed. Mario considers sending a poem into a contest for the cultural magazine, La Quinta Rueda, and seeks Neruda's help with the work. Neruda returns some time later, quite ill. It is announced that Neruda has won the Nobel Prize and Mario celebrates with the rest of the village by throwing a party at Rosa's restaurant. Secretly, Mario has saved enough money to purchase a ticket to visit Neruda in France, but matters change when his son is born and the money is spent on the child as he grows. Among other things, Mario records the tiny heartbeat of his yet unborn child. Neruda is homesick (and it is implied otherwise ill), and asks his friend to record the sounds of his homeland to send back to him. Some months pass and Mario receives a package from Neruda containing a Sony tape recorder. As Neruda is gone, Mario is no longer needed as the postman, but takes on a job as the cook in the restaurant. National workers enter the village to install electricity, and Rosa's bar becomes a restaurant for the workers. Neruda leaves to become the ambassador to France, and as he leaves, he gives Mario a leather-bound volume of his entire works. Months later, when a clandestine meeting between Beatriz and Mario turns to intercourse, Beatriz discovers she is pregnant and the two are married, much to the dismay of Rosa. Neruda tries in vain to deter Rosa's negative attitude towards Mario. Neruda's matters are complicated when he is nominated for candidacy as the president of the Chilean Communist Party, but returns to the island when the nomination turns to Salvador Allende. With Neruda's help as a poet and an influential countryman, Mario overcomes his shy nature and he and Beatriz fall in love, much to the dismay of Rosa, who banishes Beatriz from seeing Mario. Beatriz is curt and distant from Mario, and the young man finds his tongue tied whenever he tries to speak to her. In the village, Mario meets Beatriz González, the daughter of the local barkeep, Rosa. Neruda fuels Mario's interest in poetry by teaching him the value of a metaphor, and the young postman begins practicing this technique. Mario worships Neruda as a hero and buys a volume of his poetry, timidly waiting for the moment to have it autographed.Īfter some time, Mario garners enough courage to strike up a conversation with Neruda, who is waiting for word about his candidacy for the Nobel Prize for literature, and despite an awkward beginning, the two become good friends. Despite the entire village being illiterate, he does have one local to deliver to-the poet, Pablo Neruda, who is living in exile. Mario Jiménez, a timid teenager, rejects the profession of his father, a fisherman, and instead takes a job as the local postman. The story opens in June, 1969 in the little village of Isla Negra, off the coast of Chile.
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