Luis Alberto Urrea explore magistralement les thèmes des frontières, de l'immigration et de la quête d'amour et d'appartenance, puisant profondément dans sa propre expérience biculturelle. Son écriture offre des aperçus profonds sur la condition humaine et la recherche d'identité dans un monde en constante évolution. La voix distinctive d'Urrea transparaît dans ses images puissantes et sa profonde empathie pour ses personnages. Il capture les complexités de la vie en marge avec une prose vivide et une honnêteté sans faille.
In this 'raucous, moving, and necessary' (San Francisco Chronicle) story by a
Pulitzer Prize finalist, the de La Cruzes, a family on the Mexican-American
border, celebrate two of their most beloved relatives during a joyous and
bittersweet weekend
Nineteen-year-old Nayeli works at a taco shop in her Mexican village and dreams about her father, who journeyed to the US to find work. Recently, it has dawned on her that he isn't the only man who has left town. In fact, there are almost no men in the village--they've all gone north. While watching The Magnificent Seven, Nayeli decides to go north herself and recruit seven men--her own "Siete Magnificos"--to repopulate her hometown and protect it from the bandidos who plan on taking it over. Filled with unforgettable characters and prose as radiant as the Sinaloan sun, INTO THE BEAUTIFUL NORTH is the story of an irresistible young woman's quest to find herself on both sides of the fence.
The author of Across the Wire offers brilliant investigative reporting of what went wrong when, in May 2001, a group of 26 men attempted to cross the Mexican border into the desert of southern Arizona. Only 12 men came back out.
In the tradition of The Nightingale and Transcription, an exhilarating World
War II epic that chronicles an extraordinary young woman's heroic frontline
service in the Red Cross
At turns heartbreaking, uplifting, fiercely romantic, and riotously funny, Queen of America tells the unforgettable story of a young woman coming of age and finding her place in a new world.Beginning where Luis Alberto Urrea's bestselling The Hummingbird's Daughter left off, Queen of America finds young Teresita Urrea, beloved healer and "Saint of Cabora," with her father in 1892 Arizona. But, besieged by pilgrims in desperate need of her healing powers, and pursued by assassins, she has no choice but to flee the borderlands and embark on an extraordinary journey into the heart of turn-of-the-century America.Teresita's passage will take her to New York, San Francisco, and St. Louis, where she will encounter European royalty, Cuban poets, beauty queens, anxious immigrants and grand tycoons -- and, among them, a man who will force Teresita to finally ask herself the ultimate is a saint allowed to fall in love?