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Ladataan... Fight Like a Man and Other Stories We Tell Our Children (vuoden 2017 painos)Tekijä: Christine Granados (Tekijä)
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Winner of the 2018 NACCS Tejas Foco Fiction Book Award Winner of the 2017 Writers' League of Texas Fiction Discovery Prize Life in the parched landscape of El Paso is the setting for this book of stories about people navigating their way through dysfunctional lives with the help of friends and family--people like Moníca Montoya, a housewife and mother whose affair leaves her pregnant, causing her to revisit the legacy of her father, a man who maintained two separate families on either side of the Mexican-American border. In spite of their bad choices, the characters in this collection never give up. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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Christine Granados
Fight Like a Man and Other Stories We Tell Our Children
University of New Mexico Press
Paperback, 978-0-8263-5792-2, (also available as an e-book), 192 pgs., $19.95
March 1, 2017
“Normal? ¿Normal? ¿Que es normal?”
Fight Like a Man and Other Stories We Tell Our Children is reporter Christine Granados’s first collection of short fiction, comprising seven stories and the eponymous novella. Many of these stories were previously published in such literary journals as Huizache Magazine and Langdon Review of the Arts in Texas. This is a strong collection, mostly set in El Paso, Texas, featuring working-class characters, both Anglo and Latin@, chafing against the frequently uncomfortable ties that bind.
The novella Fight Like a Man is a standout. Moníca is middle-aged, married with two teenagers, when she discovers herself pregnant by her younger lover. As she debates her options, Moníca and her half-sister must decide what to do with the ashes of their father, long-deceased, who had two families—one in Juárez and another in El Paso. Moníca is more like her father than she’d like to admit, and so is her lover. It’s complicated.
Granados finds humor amidst grief in “Addressed.” Carmen must call family and friends to break the news of her mother’s death. Paging through her mother’s address book, she finds her Aunt Vanessa listed under “T” for tía, her former stepfather listed under “C” for cabrón. “Stupids” is a lesson in why Texas schools need MAS, and I’d like to nominate “Good Father” in a fantastic-first-line competition: “Opening day in Alamo City’s freshly raked baseball field started with all the fanfare and cattiness of New York’s fashion week.”
Another standout is “Shelf Life.” Trini Lopez is a single mother with a thirteen-year-old daughter who she believes “waste[s] too much of her life on … dusty, worn, and dog-eared books.” Her daughter wants shelves so she’ll have somewhere to put her books, but Trini claims not to have the money to spend on bookshelves. As she upbraids her daughter, Trini points with her manicured nails and her gold bangles slide up and down her forearms. So much is packed into these six pages.
Small, deftly observed details (“sand puddles against the curb”) anchor you in a particular place. El Paso is a presence, as is Juárez (the Kentucky Club, San Elizario, the Franklin Mountains, Western Playland), and the seamless mix of English and Spanish is a pleasure, further evoking la frontera. The population has taken the two worlds they straddle and constructed a third.
Polished yet raw, Fight Like a Man is about intimate, intricate human relationships in all their complex motivations and emotional nuance, and how we tend to prefer the devil we know.
Originally published in Lone Star Literary Life. ( )