Witness History

Isabel Allende: The House of the Spirits

8 snips
Jan 6, 2026
Isabel Allende, a renowned Chilean novelist known for her blending of magical realism and political history, shares her fascinating journey. She recounts her family's deep ties to spiritualism and her uncle, Salvador Allende, who was overthrown in the 1973 coup. The gripping story of her escape from political repression and exile unfolds, revealing how a heartfelt letter to her grandfather transformed into the epic novel, The House of the Spirits. Isabel also discusses the impact of her literary success and the complex family dynamics following her portrayal of their history.
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ANECDOTE

Childhood Séances Shaped Her Imagination

  • Isabel Allende describes childhood rituals where her grandmother and others called spirits and practiced telepathy around an oak table.
  • These family séances shaped her belief that the dead and living coexist and seeded the magical elements in her fiction.
ANECDOTE

Witnessing The 1973 Coup

  • Isabel recalls the 1973 coup vividly: finding her office closed and witnessing the bombing of the presidential palace from a school.
  • The shock of seeing planes, smoke and hearing Salvador Allende's last words marked a turning point in her life.
ANECDOTE

Hiding Refugees And Exile

  • After the coup, Isabel hid people fleeing the regime and later discovered she was on a list, which made her fear for her life.
  • The terror, rash and sleeplessness pushed her to leave Chile for Venezuela.
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