Saturday, January 24, 2015

November 2014 -

Malinche
by Laura Esquivel

Through the eyes of the historical native woman of the novel's title, Esquivel (Like Water for
Chocolate) reveals the defeat and destruction of Montezuma's 16th-century Mexicas empire at the hands of Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés. Malinche, also called Malinalli, was sold into slavery as a child and later became "The Tongue," Cortés's interpreter and lover—remembered by history as a traitor for her contribution to the brutal Spanish triumph. In her lyrical but flawed fifth novel, Esquivel details richly imagined complications for a woman trapped between the ancient Mexicas civilization and the Spaniards. Esquivel revels in descriptions of the role of ancient gods in native life and Malinalli's theological musings on the similarities between her belief system and Christianity. But what the book offers in anthropological specificity, it lacks in narrative immediacy, even while Esquivel also imagines Cortés's point of view. The author also packs the arc of Malinalli's life into a relatively short novel: she bears Cortés an illegitimate son, marries another Spaniard and has a daughter before her sad demise. The resulting disjointed storytelling gives short shrift to this complex heroine, a woman whose role in Mexican history is controversial to this day. (Publishers Weekly)


            Meeting Date/Time: Jueves Noviembre 6, 8pm CST 
(Google Hangouts)

October 2014 -

We will be discussing this podcasts from Radio Ambulante.
(Selected by Laura)


Postal De Juarez

Una mujer anónima está matando choferes de bus en Ciudad Juárez. Yuri Herrera viajó a esa ciudad para averiguar por qué. Agradecimientos a Judith Torrea, Óscar Maynez y Lizzy Cantú.

(Una versión en inglés de esta historia fue producida en octubre 2013 para This American Life. Gracias a Ira Glass y Brian Reed).


Meeting Date/Time: Miercoles Octubre 1, 8pm CST 
(Google Hang-out)

September 2014 -

Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass
by Meg Medina
2014 Pura Belpre award winner

 When Piedad “Piddy” Sanchez hears that Yaqui Delgado is going to crush her, she has no idea why she has become a target of one of the roughest girls in her new Queens school. But Yaqui tells everyone Piddy is a skank who shakes her ass when she walks, and as the bullying escalates from threats to physical attacks, Piddy finds herself living in constant fear. A strong student with a bright future at her old school, Piddy starts skipping school, and her grades nosedive. After a truly upsetting attack on Piddy is uploaded to YouTube, she realizes this isn’t a problem she can solve on her own. Medina authentically portrays the emotional rigors of bullying through Piddy’s growing sense of claustrophobic dread, and even with no shortage of loving, supportive adults on her side, there’s no easy solution. With issues of ethnic identity, class conflict, body image, and domestic violence, this could have been an overstuffed problem novel; instead, it transcends with heartfelt, truthful writing that treats the complicated roots of bullying with respect. (Booklist review by Krista Hutley)

Discussion Meeting: Wednesday September 10, 8pm
Location: Online (Google hangout)

May 2014 -

Updates
Recent opportunities, life changes and events are keeping us busy and apart (sniff, sniff). Babies are growing, school and winter hibernation is over, and summertime is back! Let's get back on track with some spanglish reading.

We are now hosting our meetings online using google hangouts!
-
Send us your new suggestions and stay tuned for upcoming reading/meeting info.

January 2014 -

Lectura libre! 

Or catch up with any of these titles we read in 2013...

The History of Now by Jesse S. Darnay (300 p)
Fifty Shades of Grey by E. L. James (528 p)
El Ruido de las Cosas al Caer by Juan Gabriel Vásquez (259 p)
Bless me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya (260-290 p)
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn (432 p)
This is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz (224 p)
Ines del Alma Mia/Ines of my Soul by Isabel Allende (352 p)
The Man with the Golden Arm by Nelson Algren (~400 p)
Llegaron los Hippies/And the Hippies Came, Manuel Abreu Adorno (100 p)


November 2013 -

The History of Now                      
by Jesse S. Darnay     
 - Local Author -

What does it mean to be lost in the landscapes of our private, bygone ghosts? For Camille Carlyle, 31, it means the inability to be present in a developing, romantic relationship with Jake Kellen. Camille is a contemporary Chicagoan still haunted by the consequences of her parents' tumultuous divorce and by the tragic loss of her childhood sweetheart during adolescence. The History of Now is a coming-of-age story that follows the internal trials Camille faces as she attempts to mend her nightmarish relationship with her past and learn to love Jake.
(Book Description)

Discussion Meeting: Saturday, November 30th @ 11am
Location: Iris' home

September / October 2013 -

Fifty Shades of Grey
by E. L. James
                    
Ok, what's all the fuss about?
Innocent girl meets billionaire boy with some serious issues; they fall for each other anyway, but is attraction enough to overcome his need for control and her need for independence? James has concocted the latest controversial mega-bestseller targeted to the female reader. Considering the cultural impact this book has made, you’ve likely heard of it, and possibly already read it. Hundreds of thousands of women are reading this book because it’s the type of scenario that never happened to us, will never happen to us, and is one from which we’d likely flee as fast as possible if it ever did happen to us—wouldn’t we? That’s the point. It’s intriguing, conceptually, to wonder “what if...?” While the book is not especially well-executed, James has tapped into a female sexual and psychological curiosity that can be disturbing if taken too seriously, but is somewhat fun and entertaining in the imagination stage. (Kirkus Review)

We are watching the musical parody.
http://50shadesthemusical.com/
Sunday October 27th, 6.30pm
Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place

August 2013 -

El Ruido de las Cosas al Caer
by Juan Gabriel Vásquez
Premio IMPAC Dublín 2014
XIV Premio Alfaguara de Novela 2011

Tan pronto conoce a Ricardo Laverde, el joven Antonio Yammara comprende que en el pasado de su nuevo amigo hay un secreto, o quiza varios. Su atracción por la misteriosa vida de Laverde, nacida al hilo de sus encuentros en un billar, se transforma en verdadera obsesion el dia en que este es asesinado. El ruido de las cosas al caer es la historia de una amistad frustrada. Pero es tambien una doble historia de amor en tiempos poco propicios, y tambien una radiografia de una generacion atrapada en el miedo, y tambien una investigacion llena de suspenso en el pasado de un hombre y el de un pais.

English Description: Upon meeting Ricardo Laverde, Antonio Yammara suspects his new-found friend is hiding something. His fascination with Laverde s mysterious life becomes an obsession the day Laverde is murdered. El ruido de las cosas al caer is a story about a friendship frustrated by circumstances, a story of love in unfavorable times, an X-ray of a generation trapped by fear, and a suspenseful investigation into the past of a man and of a country. (Alfaguara Book Description)

Leader/Host: Isabella
Discussion Meeting: Domingo Agosto 11 a las 2pm
Location: Isabella's home

June/July 2013 -

Bless me, Ultima
by Rudolfo Anaya

It’s easy to see why Rudolfo Anaya’s Bless Me, Ultima has become one of Latino literature’s greatest classics and a well-read book in the classroom. The story of one boy’s struggle to find faith touches readers on a personal and cultural level. Ultima was first published in 1972 by a small press, then grew in popularity through the decades – and has been the subject of banning at schools due to profanity. The book is told through the eyes of 6-year-old Antonio Marez, who lives in rural New Mexico with his family in the 1940s. His mother wants him to become a priest, hoping for a more stable life than his brothers and some of the other villagers. The family invites Ultima, an elderly curandera, to live with them and she makes an instant connection with Antonio. Antonio begins having visions as his town experiences some tough situations – including a shooting he witnesses. Some townspeople are angry at Ultima, accusing her of being a bruja who places curses on others. But Ultima also heals people. As he undergoes his First Communion, Antonio begins to question his Catholic faith. The book is a fast read, with a well-paced plot and vivid descriptions about the land. Anaya also balances the dramatic passages with funny scenes at a Christmas pageant and Holy Communion. Bless Me, Ultima features some of the most prominent elements of Latino literature and the universal themes such as the importance of family and the toughness of growing up. Little wonder why it’s a classic. (hispanicreader.com review)

 Leader/Host: Fanny & Iris
Discussion Meeting: Sunday July 7th at 2pm.
Location: Iris's home

May 2013 -

Gone Girl
by Gillian Flynn


With her third novel (after the acclaimed Sharp Objects and Dark Places), Flynn cements her place among that elite group of mystery/thriller writers who unfailingly deliver the goods. On the day of her fifth wedding anniversary, Amy Dunne vanishes from her home under suspicious circumstances. Through a narrative that alternates between Amy’s diary entries and her husband Nick’s real-time experiences in the aftermath of her disappearance, the complicated relationship that was their marriage unfolds, leaving the reader with a growing list of scenarios, suspects, and motives to consider. Meanwhile, the police, the press, and the public focus intently on Nick, the journalist‚ turned‚ bar owner who uprooted Amy from her comfortable New York life to return to his Missouri hometown. VERDICT Once again Flynn has written an intelligent, gripping tour de force, mixing a riveting plot and psychological intrigue with a compelling prose style that unobtrusively yet forcefully carries the reader from page to page. (Library Journal Review by Nancy McNicol, Hamden P.L., CT)

Leader/Host: Fanny
Discussion Meeting: Saturday May 25th @ 3pm
Location: Fanny's home

April 2013 -

This is How You Lose Her
by Junot Diaz (again, yay!)

From the author of Drown (1996), more tales of Dominican life in the cold, unwelcoming United States. Eight of the collection’s nine stories center on Yunior, who shares some of his creator’s back story. Brought from the Dominican Republic as a kid by his father, he grows up uneasily in New Jersey, escaping the neighborhood career options of manual labor and drug dealing to become an academic and fiction writer. What Yunior can’t escape is what his mother and various girlfriends see as the Dominican man’s insatiable need to cheat. The narrative moves backward and forward in time, resisting the temptation to turn interconnected tales into a novel by default, but it has a depressingly unified theme: Over and over, a fiery woman walks when she learns Yunior can’t be true, and he pines fruitlessly over his loss. He’s got a lot of other baggage to deal with as well: His older brother Rafa dies of cancer; a flashback to the family’s arrival in the U.S. shows his father—who later runs off with another woman—to be a rigid, controlling, frequently brutal disciplinarian; and Yunior graduates from youthful drug use to severe health issues. These grim particulars are leavened by Díaz’s magnificent prose, an exuberant rendering of the driving rhythms and juicy Spanglish vocabulary of immigrant speech. Still, all that penitent machismo gets irksome, perhaps for the author as well, since the collection’s most moving story leaves Yunior behind for a female narrator. Yasmin works in the laundry of St. Peter’s Hospital in New Brunswick; her married lover has left his wife behind in Santo Domingo and plans to buy a house for him and Yasmin. Told in quiet, weary prose, “Otravida, Otra Vez” offers a counterpoint to Yunior’s turbulent wanderings with its gentle portrait of a woman quietly enduring as best she can.
(Kirkus Review)

Leader/Host: Diana
Discussion Meeting: Sunday, April 21st @ 11am
Location: Shokolad  Pastry & Cafe (2524 W Chicago Ave). http://www.shokoladpastryandcafe.com

March 2013 -

Ines del Alma Mia / Ines of my Soul
by Isabel Allende

Doña Inés Suárez, nacida en España, proveniente de una familia pobre, sobrevive a diario trabajando como costurera. Es el siglo dieciséis y la conquista de América está comenzando. Un día el esposo de Inés desaparece rumbo al Nuevo Mundo, ella aprovecha para partir en busca de él y escapar de su vida claustrofóbica que lleva en su tierra natal. Su accidentado viaje la lleva a Perú, donde al llegar se entera que su esposo ha muerto en una batalla. Al poco tiempo Inés comienza una apasionada relación con Pedro Valdivia, hombre que le cambia la vida por completo. Pedro Valdivia es un valiente héroe de guerra y mariscal de Francisco Pizarro. Uno de los sueños de Valdivia es triunfar donde españoles han fracasado, llevando a cabo la conquista de Chile. Juntos los amantes fundan la cuidad de Santiago de Chile y lideran una guerra sangrienta contra los indígenas chilenos, en una lucha que cambiara sus vidas para siempre. Basada en una investigación meticulosa, y contada con la pasión y el extraordinario talento narrativo de Isabel Allende, Inés del Alma Mía es una obra de impresionante magnitud. (Editorial Review)

Leader/Host: Ellen
Discussion Meeting: Sunday March 23 @ 6pm
Location: Casa de Ellen