News from the Empire
News from the Empire is a 1987 historical novel by Mexican writer Fernando del Paso about the Second French Intervention in Mexico and the Mexican Empire, with Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico and his wife Carlota of Mexico.
In 2007, a jury of writers gathered by Nexos magazine chose News from the Empire as the best Mexican novel of the last 30 years.
Background
The novel was written with a Guggenheim Fellowship stipend. Del Paso worked on it for ten years, at the end of writing his second novel, Palinuro of Mexico. Two of those ten years were spent in extensive historical research. According to Del Paso, he chose to give strength to Carlota's first-person narrative because he considered her to be a strong woman and a decision maker. Del Paso read two existing works on the subject that he considered insufficient, Juárez and Maximilian by Franz Werfel and Corona de sombra by Rodolfo Usigli. Del Paso has said of Maximilian and Carlota:It was first published in 1987 by Editorial Diana in its collection "Diana Literaria".
Plot
The novel is written in two sequences, the first is a monologue by Empress Carlota while she was locked up in the Bouchout Castle in Belgium, sixty years after the death of Maximilian, shot at Cerro de las Campanas, Querétaro, on June 19, 1867, as she fell into madness after his death. In this monologue, Carlota explains the story of her love for Maximilian, as well as the times of the Second Mexican Empire and European royalty.At the same time, del Paso resorts to various genres and techniques to give voice to the different parties involved in the conflict, among them epistles between members of the royalty, historical chronicles, which have as settings the Miramare Castle, Mexico, France, Germany, Vienna, among other places, and characters such as Charles de Lorencez, François Achille Bazaine, Élie-Frédéric Forey, Miguel Miramón, Tomás Mejía, Benito Juárez, Porfirio Díaz, Mariano Escobedo, Gaspar Sánchez Ochoa, Franz Joseph I of Austria, Napoleon III, among other historical participants in the conflict.
Both sequences take turns, changing the name of the chapter of the narrative sequence while all of Carlota's monologues are always titled "Bouchout Castle 1927".