Juliana Bicudo (Height)

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The Height with Juliana Bicudo is a captivating, engaging and sexy tale about the life of the beautiful Height, with her two husbands, David and George. Height grew up as the daughter of well to do Spanish parents who adored their only child and raised her in the best of European style. Her career was not always so successful however, as her relationships with men did not live up to expectations and she was often depicted as weak by both her fans and the reading public who knew nothing of her inner struggle with identity. The Height’s first husband, George, was an engineer, born to wealthy families in Plymouth, England where his father worked to make the railroad run successfully. Though George was educated and had a good job, he soon left his wife and became involved in the boating trade which proved to be disastrous for the marriage.

His next marriage, to Lucinda de Montalcino, was a less than successful endeavor. He remained a bachelor after that, living with his cousin, Catalina, in a small fishing village on Catalina Island where he made money boating and catching fish. When his wife died in a carriage accident while he was driving across town to visit his dying father, he never returned. His Uncle Mario, who was born in Yucatan, Mexico, took him in and brought him to Catalina Island, where his Uncle taught him the language of Yucatan. Growing ever more influenced by his background and the social conditions of his adopted nation, Height settled down and married Elvira, an older lady who was in the service of the navy and who became his true lover.

During World War II Height’s marriage to Rosa Marisca ended in divorce and he remained single for the rest of his life. When he returned to Spain in the late thirties, his social circle and people in his profession often referred to him as “The reincarnated Height”. In the late fifties and the sixties, he decided to pursue an education, traveling to Paris and writing several books of poetry and novels. Later he devoted much of his time to studying and writing about his native nationality, especially the way in which it has been influenced by Spain and by its immigration policies.

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