As also described below, Isabel Allende has been extraordinarily prolific and widely known within the literary and Latin American worlds. In fact, she is cited as a very important representation of Chilean culture in numerous Spanish language textbooks all over the country. Therefore, not only do her works and the existence of a foundation in her name indicate her influence, but acknowledgement within widely printed texts also shows how deeply important this woman is to the culture of Chile and the Spanish-speaking realm.
First and foremost, I cannot ignore how humble Allende is. From the moment any of her pieces on her websites or works are read, the reader can almost immediately understand this quality. She even seems to "refuse" to write a traditional biography and gives brief insight about her life that is marked with simplicity. It is apparent that she has always been closely connected to the public arena, but she shares that the most important events have been with the people she loves and within her heart; two entities she does not (understandably) care to share. In this, she does not strive to boast or intimidate or seem above others despite her immense accomplishments, but she does provide comments on living that she has found to be true. She says:
- "It is important to be kind, be truthful, and take care of others and myself.
- Women my age, as elders of the village, have a duty to care for the young, especially girls. If the world is ever going to heal, it will be women who will make it so. Today's girls are tomorrow's women. We cannot leave them to fend for themselves.
- I have been empowered by education, reproductive rights and economic independence. Young women who are uneducated and have no skills, who are not in control of their own bodies and fertility, and who cannot support themselves, can become destitute and be victimized. Each of us must act without delay to empower girls to take control of their lives, even if they stumble and fall a hundred times. With our help, they can succeed.
- In every human being there is a core of shining dignity and courage" (Allende 2007).
As stated above, one of Allende's most important and well-received works is Paula. Allende states that Paula was never meant to be published. It was supposed to be a way for her teach herself how to let her daughter go. Between 1991 and 1992, Paula was in a coma due to a rare blood disease. Allende simply wanted a way to calm herself and something to give her future children and grand children as a comfort and marking of this passage of life. In Paula, Allende goes back and forth between her childhood past and the present reality of her daughter's hospital stay. This memoir has been described as a thriller. She dictates extraordinary stories about her ancestors and the lessons each of us can learn from them. We also hear her wonderful and bitter memories of childhood, the amazing anecdotes of her youth, and the most intimate secrets that should be told in whispers are heard. In Paula, Allende writes an unconventional autobiography whose acceptance of the magical and spiritual worlds remind the reader of her first book The House of the Spirits. Please explore this page to the fullest and absorb Allende's spirit one word, one sentence, one paragraph and one work at a time; it all adds up.