Thank
you Hopeton Hay for interviewing me about Nobody's Pilgrims for Diverse Voices Book Review. What a great conversation we had! I loved it. These
are my favorite conversations to have, with someone who loves books and
digs deep into the novel and can appreciate the nuances of the
characters and places I write about. So grateful!
I'm on the cover AL DÍA, a bilingual magazine from Philadelphia. Thank you!
"NOBODY'S PILGRIMS was written before 20 cases of COVID-19 existed in the U.S., and in a way, the novel predicted the pandemic that was to follow. The pandemic in my novel is transmitted by touch, and I just thought about what would tear apart this country and set us against each other. My answer was a pandemic. The three teenagers, all outsiders, forge a community of three, even as many around them turn against each other. And that’s what the novel is about: how we fight to stay together, how we struggle and succeed in becoming a ‘we,’” he said.
My blog post about NOBODY'S PILGRIMS (Cinco Puntos Press: Lee & Low Books):
"Can imagination be a window into a possible future? Yes, indeed it can. I wrote my novel, Nobody’s Pilgrims, before twenty cases of COVID-19 existed in the United States. I actually turned in the final final draft of my novel to my publisher, Cinco Puntos Press, on leap day, February 29, 2020. Moreover, most of the novel had been written even earlier. And what was the novel about? Three runaway teenagers, Turi, Arnulfo, and Molly, pursued by evil people across a dystopian United States collapsing because of a pandemic."
The editors of Somos En Escrito --Armando Rendon, Jenny Irizary, and Scott Duncan Fernandez-- interview Sergio Troncoso about his trajectory as a writer, Chicano literature and the morphing of its readership, changing organizations like the Texas Institute of Letters, and his new novel, Nobody's Pilgrims (Lee & Low Books: Cinco Puntos Press).
Sergio Troncoso: "The novel is about the grit and intelligence and luck of these three teenagers, Turi, Arnulfo, and Molly. They are all people who are ignored, los de abajo. They are working class, or even worse. They find each other, and they don't belong anywhere else. They belong with each other, but not with anyone else. And as things start falling apart, they have to find solutions.... The novel is about creating that togetherness within this small group that maybe we don't have or are losing in this country, how we belong together when we go through very difficult trials."
"I was a poor kid growing up in Ysleta, and the El Paso Public Library
was the place where I found my sanctuary. I found the peace and quiet to
concentrate my mind, and I could go and pick up books for free and read
to my heart’s content. The public library was so central to my early
education and to expanding what I learned in grade school and high
school....
At a meeting, the El Paso City Council voted unanimously to rename the
branch library in Ysleta as the Sergio Troncoso Branch Library. It was
one of the proudest moments of my literary life. I had grown up within
walking distance from the library. Our family had begun with an outhouse
in the backyard and kerosene lamps and stoves in Ysleta. We were as
poor as poor can be. But reading, focus, discipline and the Mexican
immigrant values of my parents propelled me forward over many years. And
I never stopped working to be a literary voice for los de abajo, the underdogs, from Ysleta and El Paso."
My first copies of NOBODY'S PILGRIMS just arrived! I'm very excited for this new 2022 novel about three teenagers, Turi, Molly, and Arnulfo, on the run from evil and unwittingly carrying even a greater menace in their stolen truck. The border goes beyond the border in a story about who belongs in the United States and how finding your place in this world is about finding the right person to be with you. (Lee & Low Books: Cinco Puntos Press. Publication date: May 10, 2022.)
"The castoffs and castaways of Nobody's Pilgrims hit the road in search of the American Dream, a long shot made longer by the pack of human devils hot on their trail. In this superb novel, Sergio Troncoso gives us a fresh take not only on the great American road trip, but on the American Dream itself in all its glorious and increasingly fragile promise. The propulsive force of this novel, and the destination it ultimately brings us to, left me wanting more, and yet feeling completely satisfied. As only the best novels do."
--Ben Fountain, PEN/Hemingway award-winning author of Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
"In a world marked by cruelty, corruption, bigotry and disease, Troncoso shows us there's still room for love. With his finely honed prose style, he takes us on a journey across the country with three young hungry teens whose dreams are the only lifelines they have left. A powerful, compelling read."
--Octavio Solis, author of Retablos: Stories From a Life Lived Along the Border
"Eloquent, bold and terrifying, Nobody's Pilgrims is a fresh new take on the ancient themes of innocence pursued by evil, and of the young finding their way through a chaotic and uncertain world. Turi, Arnulfo and Molly are original and uniquely endearing, and they're a pleasure to travel with, even on such a frightening journey."
--Elizabeth Crook, author of The Which Way Tree
"Nobody's Pilgrims offers a stark vision of a country whose social ills have sullied the path to the pursuit of happiness. Yet its intrepid protagonists Turi and Molly persevere, charting their own map and adapting, like generations of dreamers, immigrants, and adventurers before them, to the latest hurdles of our troubled world. Sergio Troncoso has given us a timely dystopian tale heavy with anguish but invigorated by resilience."
--Rigoberto González, author of Butterfly Boy: Memories of a Chicano Mariposa
Thank you Minerva Laveaga Luna and Book Riot for featuring Nepantla Familias:
"The book asks readers from any background, whether they are Mexican
American or not, 'to see these writers as individuals, to see the
characters they have created not as caricatures, but as complex
characters. This book is a call to action to open your minds, to take
the time to open your hearts, and to meet in the complex and
ever-questioning middle ground of Nepantla.'"
Thank you Michael Barnes and the Austin American-Statesman for the extensive interview about Nepantla Familias
(Texas A&M University Press and The Wittliff Literary Series), "a
fantastic anthology of Mexican American literature." This is what I
said, among other things:
Austin American Statesman: How can those groups encourage, train and promote fantastic writers like the ones represented in your book?
Sergio Troncoso:
"By paying attention to them. By reading their work. By promoting them
and putting them in positions of power. It's not that complicated.
Many
literary institutions in Texas, and beyond, have ignored or stereotyped
Mexican American writers. "Nepantla Familias" shows the literary talent
we have in our community, talent that is winning national and
international awards and fellowships, that is selling hundreds of
thousands of books, that is being published in places from the New
Yorker to Ploughshares to the Yale Review."
"I think one of the benefits that Nepantla Familias will have for all readers is to break apart any preconceptions about Mexican American literature and Mexican American authors. What you will find in this anthology is variety, experimentation, metaphysical questions, real-world complexity, tragedy, and comedy.... I think this anthology will stand the test of time for readers across the country and will open their eyes to appreciate that Mexican Americans deserve an essential and important place in American literature."