Nepantla Familias makes the top five 2021 books on race and ethnicity by Diverse Voices Book Review! Thank you, Hopeton Hay! What a great way to start the year.
https://twitter.com/diversebookshay/status/1477412025538068480
Nepantla Familias makes the top five 2021 books on race and ethnicity by Diverse Voices Book Review! Thank you, Hopeton Hay! What a great way to start the year.
https://twitter.com/diversebookshay/status/1477412025538068480
"Currently reading Nepantla Familias: a phenomenal anthology of Mexican American literature on families in between worlds by @SergioTroncoso. Super recommended!!"
—Pati Jinich of Pati's Mexican Table on Twitter
https://www.pbs.org/video/de-sergio-tc2zb7/
Erin Popelka of Must Read Fiction talks with Sergio Troncoso and Octavio Solis about Nepantla Familias: An Anthology of Mexican American Literature on Families in between Worlds (Texas A&M University Press). We talk about what nepantla means to both authors, and how this in between creates illusions, conflicting loyalties, and also transcendence. We also talk about both of their pieces in the collection as well as highlights from some of the others writers in the book.
https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?v=1733284733522502&ref=watch_permalink
https://skylightbooks.podbean.com/e/skylit-nepantla-familias-group-reading/
"Ysleta with a “Y” is where I grew up, where I went to Ysleta High
School, and where my heart always returns when I need to heal, when I
want to hug my mother. Ysleta is a first principle for understanding my
soul—or as Aristotle would define it, a basic proposition that cannot be
deducted from any other proposition. Ysleta is where I began, where I
was formed. This community is at the edge of the edge of the United
States, and I became an outsider and iconoclast in this country because
of it. My mother belonged to the desolate landscape of Ysleta, yet she
yearned to go beyond it. I admired her, yet when I left home, I knew I
was traveling farther physically as well as philosophically than she
ever could."
https://texashighways.com/culture/people/essay-growing-up-and-growing-old-in-ysleta/
Frederick Luis Aldama interviews Sergio Troncoso in American Book Review:
“You are your own best experiment. If you’re digging honestly into yourself, you’re also looking at the problems and issues that that make up the human condition. So I think my ideal reader begins with someone on the border who loves to read. But I also think of readers beyond the border, those who have left and those who have come back, because many do precisely that.”
(Volume 42, Number 4, May/June 2021, pp. 14-28.)
https://sergiotroncoso.com/news/americanbookreview/Sergio-Troncoso-American-Book-Review.pdf