While watching The Magnificent Seven at the local cinema, a young woman is struck by an idea. Nayeli and three friends set off on a quest (like all epic stories) to America to find seven men to return to their village and begin life there anew.
It's a fun, entertaining "road story" as the group encounters big cities, bus travel, new experiences, love and lust, illegal border crossing, American tourists, and much more.
While written in 2009, the story has some very timely elements. The Mexicans in the book have many, many opinions about migration from the south (and control of their southern border) along with simultaneous, opposing opinions about migration to the north and control of the northern border.
I'd highly recommend listening to this one: The book is an interesting blend of English and Mexican-Spanish - some translated, some left to inference - which made it a fantastic audiobook full of language and nuance and local flavor.
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras by Duncan Tonatiuh
I get asked all the time, "What's the deal with all the skulls?" And while it's a multi-faceted love affair for me, this book may help at least partially answer that question.
Mexican artist Jose Guadalupe Posada didn't get famous for his Day of the Dead artwork until after he died, and this children's picture book tries to explain both why he drew them and also why they eventually found such widespread popularity. Lots of Posada's art is used throughout the book.
But the book's author/illustrator, Duncan Tonatiuh, uses another native Mexican art form - Mixtec codex - as the inspiration for his own drawings, which means the book offers a wonderful "crash course" in heritage art and its inspirations in modern culture.
I love, love, LOVE this book - make sure you give it a look!
Mexican artist Jose Guadalupe Posada didn't get famous for his Day of the Dead artwork until after he died, and this children's picture book tries to explain both why he drew them and also why they eventually found such widespread popularity. Lots of Posada's art is used throughout the book.
But the book's author/illustrator, Duncan Tonatiuh, uses another native Mexican art form - Mixtec codex - as the inspiration for his own drawings, which means the book offers a wonderful "crash course" in heritage art and its inspirations in modern culture.
I love, love, LOVE this book - make sure you give it a look!
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Under the mesquite
by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
McCall's first book is a novel in verse. It's always kind of fun to see an author who manages to tell a complex story within the confines of poetry.
Lupita is a high school student with aspirations toward drama and performing. She's the oldest of eight children in a family that now lives in Texas, but once lived just south of the border. The family travels freely and frequently back to visit relatives, until Mami gets cancer. Lupita shows a level of strength that few teenagers in America find themselves needing.
McCall's first book is a novel in verse. It's always kind of fun to see an author who manages to tell a complex story within the confines of poetry.
Lupita is a high school student with aspirations toward drama and performing. She's the oldest of eight children in a family that now lives in Texas, but once lived just south of the border. The family travels freely and frequently back to visit relatives, until Mami gets cancer. Lupita shows a level of strength that few teenagers in America find themselves needing.
Labels:
cancer,
death,
drama,
family tragedy,
immigration,
Mexico,
Texas
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Hot House Flower and the 9 Plants of Desire by Margot Berwin
This is absolutely one of the best books I've read (listened to, actually). Jaw-dropping descriptions, strange situations, and I never knew what was going to happen next. WOW.
The book's a mix of mysticism, sensuality, and botany. It's fiction - really the story of a newly divorced woman trying to find herself - but much, much different than other books with that starting point. It's not a sex book (oh, Juan Carlo! You must take me now!) but it is truly one of the most sensual, sexual books I've read in recent history ... I never knew plants could be so sexy (especially the exquisitely sexually frustrated and tortured Sensimilla! Yikes!).
The book's a mix of mysticism, sensuality, and botany. It's fiction - really the story of a newly divorced woman trying to find herself - but much, much different than other books with that starting point. It's not a sex book (oh, Juan Carlo! You must take me now!) but it is truly one of the most sensual, sexual books I've read in recent history ... I never knew plants could be so sexy (especially the exquisitely sexually frustrated and tortured Sensimilla! Yikes!).
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