Showing posts with label Words to Stir the Soul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Words to Stir the Soul. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2008

Soul-Stirring Words

In this edition of La Bloga:

Words To Stir The Soul

Adiós, La Mano Press

Remembering 1968

A Dozen On Denver


WORDS TO STIR THE SOUL
Earlier this week I had the pleasure of participating in Words To Stir The Soul, an annual event (for twelve years now) sponsored by the Center of the American West. This is quite a literary happening. The idea is to bring together a diverse group of people (professors, writers, artists, community leaders, etc.) to read from their favorite literature, usually around a common theme. Each reader gets five minutes only (and a very short amount of time for an introduction and to provide some context), but the reading selections are up to the individual readers. Words To Stir The Soul has always been a multi-hued, multi-layered celebration of literature.

Here's the introduction from the printed program:

Words To Stir The Soul spotlights some of the region's best writing by providing a unique opportunity for both readers and attendees to deepen their appreciation of the region in which we live. In this process, the Center of the American West strives to create dialogue and establish non-partisan relationships that can lift us above the rhetoric that frequently governs public dialogue about the complex issues we face as westerners. When we conceived this event, we did so with the faith that the better angels of our nature would prevail. We hope you enjoy tonight's reading.

This year's event focused on immigration and the intent was to present works that discussed the topic in a creative, artistic fashion, and not necessarily as part of a political debate or polemic.

Patty Limerick, the Faculty Director of the Center, is an enthusiastic host for this event; she's enthusiastic about everything she does and if you ever get a chance to see her you should jump at the opportunity. Read one of her thought-provoking opinion pieces in periodicals such as the Rocky Mountain News, New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. She introduced this year's program and the readers by reminding the audience that immigration issues, questions, and concerns are not new topics in the West and that many Western writers have tackled the subject.

I chose for my reading the first few pages of John Phillip Santos' incredible memoir, Places Left Unfinished at the Time of Creation (Viking, 1999). This book was a finalist for the National Book Award and in 2006 was the One Book, One City selection for San Antonio. I chose it because it faithfully, and beautifully, conveys the duality of the Mexican-American experience - roots in this country that go deep, for hundreds of years, and yet often we are newcomers, fresh from the border, in our own heads and in the eyes of our fellow residents of this contradictory, confusing country.


I'll list here some of the other readers (a complete list is here - heavy on professors this year) and their selections, many of which should be familiar to La Bloga readers:

Steve Burkholder, former Mayor of Lakewood, Colorado, read from Luis Alberto Urrea's The Devil's Highway (Back Bay Books, 2005), one of La Bloga's all-time favorites;

Daryl Maeda, Professor in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, chose No-No Boy by John Okada (University of Washington Press, 1978); this reading made me want to read Okada's classic; it's now on my list;

José Mercado, Asst. Professor in the Department of Theater, Film & Video Production, University of Colorado, Denver, read Federico Peña's speech, We Are America, originally presented by the former Mayor of Denver at the massive Cinco de Mayo immigration rally in Denver in 2006;

John-Michael Rivera, Assoc. Professor in the Department of English, University of Colorado, Boulder, and Director of El Laboratorio, read from The People of Paper, Salvador Plascencia (Harvest Books, 2006); remember the controversy we discussed here about this book and its author?

MaryAnn Villarreal, Asst. Professor in the Department of History, University of Colorado, Boulder, presented selections from Crossing by Manuel Luis Martínez (Bilingual Review Press, 1998); another book added to my list because of this event; a photo of Villarreal from the event is to the right.

William Wei, Professor in the Department of History, University of Colorado, Boulder, read from America is in the Heart: A Personal History by Carlos Bulosan (University of Washington Press, 1974); this book should be on every one's list.

The nature of the event does not leave time for discussion after the readings, but that is certainly something that could be added. I have been thinking that I might try to put together my own version of Words to Stir the Soul. I would invite Latino/a writers, artists, musicians, teachers, entrepreneurs, etc., to read from their favorite book by a Latino/a writer - no set theme. Talk about encouraging literacy. Hook-up with a school, get the students to attend, and it could well be a night to remember, and a night with lasting impact. Don't you think we'd hear everything from Bless Me, Ultima to The Undead Kama Sutra, with a bit of Juan Felipe Herrera and the Hernandez Bros in-between? Now that's literature.

Muchisimas gracias to the Center of the American West for the invitation to participate.



ADIÓS, LA MANO PRESS
I pass on this message:

"After five great years at La Mano Press we have decided to say goodbye to LA. For me it has been about 14 years of learning experiences, accomplishments, many good moments and many great friends. We, Silvia, myself and all the friends who
have collaborated with us, have done all our best to try to promote the arts in our communities. I hope we have at least left some mark along our way. We can no longer afford the expense of having La Mano Press open while we live and work in Mexico. I am already working on a nice project down there: EL HUERTO, a center for ecology and arts, a botanical garden with an adobe building
dedicated to the arts. To see it: http://www.lamanopress.com/huerto.html

"This Saturday November 15, join us for the GRAFICOMOVIL party, a traveling mural, mobile cinema, gallery and print studio.

http://www.lamanopress.com/grafico.htm


"After two years of a lot of hard work, Oscar Duardo and myself, have transformed the old and rusty 1947 delivery truck into this great piece of art. Now we want to take it to the streets and hopefully travel across country with it. In this
event we will be asking for your cooperation, to make this a reality. Almost forgot, we have designed and produced 2 new skate decks. In this event you will also get a chance to see them, as they are hot off the press.

"Our last event will be our Christmas sale on Dec. 5,6,7. As usual many artists
will be here to share their wonderful work. I hope to see you here so we can toast together for La Mano Press's past history and the hope of a great future for all of us. Invite friends.

"Saludos,
Artemio Rodriguez"
La Mano Press - 1749 N. Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90031

REMEMBERING 1968
From forty years later, the events of 1968 appear as fantastic images caught in a strobe light, pulsing to the beat of countryfied rock music. Unreal, sometimes unbelievable, the people and passions of 1968 shine directly on what we have experienced in the very political year of 2008.

I've been thinking a lot about 1968. I recently wrote about that year in a novel I'm working on, and only a few weeks ago I watched the excellent animated documentary Chicago 10, which details the notorious trial of the men accused of inciting riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. I remember the big events of that year, of course - all around the world, revolution was on the agenda, revolution was in the air, as the poet said. From Mexico City to Paris, from Czechoslovakia to Northern Ireland. South Africa to Vietnam. Here in this country, student takeovers of university buildings ; the San Francisco State College student strike. Riots in the cities, antiwar marches and civil rights demonstrations. The hippie counter-culture, psychedelic music and drugs, free love and free form jazz. Chávez fasted for the farm workers. Chicano teachers and students in Los Angeles walked out of the classrooms for eight days. The assassinations: Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy. The murders of progressive leaders, Black Panthers, Chicano activists, and many others. A year of conflict and climax; the year I grew up.

And I remember the not-so big events.

I worked in construction that summer, with my father, trying to earn enough to stay in school and save for a student life style that I hoped would be more than cheese and crackers, condensed soup and cheap wine. My Dad worked me to death but that made it easy for me to understand why I had to stay in school. I would come home totally exhausted, not able to do more than collapse on the living room floor and watch the news. I saw the city of Chicago hunt its own children, I heard the politicians call for the blood of the peace-mongers, and I knew which side I had to be on. It's been forty years since a group of very young Chicano students came back to the Colorado State University campus radicalized and "incited" by events that happened that summer, including the brutal attacks on the antiwar protesters in Grant Park, the same site where Barack Obama would acknowledge his election as President of the U.S. In 1968 that group of very young students created one of the first Chicano student organizations in the state - the Mexican American Committee for Equality (MACE). They made demands on the CSU administration for more students and teachers of color; for more relevant classes and degrees; for less of a university involvement in the U.S. war machine. MACE eventually formed a coalition with the Black Student Alliance; they protested, marched, disrupted, and worried through candlelight vigils. They were gassed, arrested, threatened with expulsion and violent injury. They lived what we now trivialize with the throw-away tag of "the Sixties."

Bottom line - MACE and the BSA created a recruitment, scholarship and mentoring program at CSU that has changed over the years, but it still functions and has provided assistance for thousands of students.

You got stuff from 1968?

A DOZEN ON DENVER
This November, the city of Denver celebrates its 150th anniversary. In April, the Rocky Mountain News follows with its own 150th. To commemorate both, the News is running a special series titled A Dozen on Denver: Stories to Celebrate the City at 150. For the series, the News commissioned 11 Colorado authors to write original fiction. The authors were asked to choose a different decade of Denver's history, to mention Larimer Street at least once in their stories and to keep it all to 2,500 words.

The News has featured a new story each Tuesday since the beginning of the se
ries. Coming Friday (November 14 - today), look for a special section in print compiling all the stories, plus one additional piece: the winner of the News' story contest.

Also Friday, stop by the Denver Newspaper Agency lobby at 5 p.m. to meet some of the featured authors and help kick off the Rocky's 150th anniversary.
The public is invited to mix and mingle with many of the 12 Dozen on Denver authors, plus enjoy a beverage and light appetizers from 5 to 7 pm.

The party will be in the Denver Newspaper Agency lobby, 101 W. Colfax Ave., in downtown Denver. Rocky Publisher John Temple, Denver author Sandra Dallas and Rocky Books Editor Patti Thorn will share comments about the series and attendees are welcome to bring items for authors to autograph.

I'll see you there.

Later.


Friday, October 31, 2008

Cambio

MORE ABOUT HIT LIST
Marina Tristán, Assistant Director of Arte Público, forwarded the catalog copy for the new anthology of Latino crime fiction, Hit List. I'll reprint it here with the hope that it whets your interest in this collection.

Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery
Edited by Sarah Cortez and Liz Martínez
Introduction by Sarah Cortez
Foreword by Ralph E. Rodríguez, Ph.D.
March 31, 2009, 240 pages, $19.95 ISBN-10: 1-55885-543-2 ISBN-13: 978-1-55885-543-4

This first-ever collection of short mystery fiction by Latino authors contains both stylistically and ethnically diverse stories. In Lucha Corpi’s story, Hollow Point at the Synapses, her unique narrator—a bullet—describes the instant before killing a young Peruvian woman: I feel the pull of the hammer. The pressure mounts. I am now in place. The moment is upon me. Swiftly and efficiently, I will do what I must, what I was created for. In an instant, I am off, traveling at a speed reserved only for death.

This groundbreaking anthology of short fiction by Latino mystery writers, Hit List: The Best of Latino Mystery, features an intriguing and unpredictable cast of sleuths, murderers and crime victims. Reflecting the authors’—and society’s—preoccupation with identity, self, and territory, the stories run the gamut of the mystery genre, from traditional to noir, from the private investigator to the police procedural, and even a chick lit mystery.

The Right Profile features a Miami private investigator who goes undercover to prove a deadbeat father can pay child support, and she delights in testifying against him in court. In The Skull of Pancho Villa, someone has stolen the family heirloom and it’s up to Gus Corral to get it back. And in A New York Chicano, a successful bachelor from El Paso—a graduate of NYU working for Merrill Lynch in Manhattan—gets his revenge against a xenophobic newscaster.

Hit List collects for the first time short fiction by many of the Latino authors who have been pioneers in the mystery genre, using it to showcase their unique cultures, neighborhoods and realities. Contributors include award-winning writers such as Carolina García-Aguilera, Alicia Gaspar de Alba, Rolando Hinojosa, Manuel Ramos and Sergio Troncoso, as well as emerging writers who deserve more recognition.

Sarah Cortez is a poet, educator, and law enforcement officer. She is the author of a poetry collection, How to Undress a Cop (Arte Público Press, 2000), which won the PEN Texas Literary Award in Poetry, and she edited Windows into My World: Latino Youth Write Their Lives (Piñata Books, 2007), winner of a 2008 Skipping Stones Honor Award. She lives and works in Houston, Texas.

Liz Martínez a New York State investigator, has published short stories in numerous anthologies and magazines, including Manhattan Noir (Akashic Books, 2006) and Police Officer’s Quarterly. She lives and works in New York City.


RECENT LITERARY AWARDS FROM SPAIN HONOR CRIME FICTION WRITERS
Margaret Atwood, the popular and prolific Canadian writer who won the 2000 Hammett Prize for The Blind Assassin, will receive Spain’s prestigious Prince of Asturias prize for literature. The prize carries a $66,000 cash award.

Fernando Savater, Spanish author, philosopher and political activist, was named the winner of the Premio Planeta, Spain's most lucrative literary prize, for La Hermandad de la Buena Suerte (The Brotherhood of Good Luck), a detective novel about a missing jockey. The prize carries a cash award of $820,000.


WORDS TO STIR THE SOUL - IMMIGRATION
November 12th, 2008 7:00pm in Old Main, University of Colorado, Boulder Campus
The Center of the American West presents its annual Words to Stir the Soul program. The Center's announcement says: On the heels of one of the longest presidential campaigns in history, one that has turned up the heat on this topic, the Center will shift the focus back from positions to people. This special evening will celebrate the literature of immigration, rather than the policies of immigration. Come listen as community members, politicians, public servants, professors, and a host of others read selections from a literature that has played a crucial role in the formation of the narrative of the West.

I'll be reading at this event but I haven't yet picked my selection. There are many good ones to choose from; for example: Reyna Grande's Across A Hundred Mountains, Luis Alberto Urrea's The Devil's Highway, Victor Villaseñor's Rain of Gold - any other suggestions?


LA BLOGA POLITICA

WHAT TO READ ON ELECTION NIGHT
I won't make a percentage-of-the-vote prediction; the numbers are all up for grabs, in my opinion. Landslide? Too close for comfort? I do expect Barack Obama to win but I think it will be tight and that Tuesday night will be a very long night. I won't mind, though, if the Republicans win only Alaska and Arizona and the Presidency is settled by 9:00 pm. However, in anticipation that most of us will be up long past our usual bedtimes, here are some diverse suggestions for reading material as you watch the returns. Keeping everything in context, these novels should satisfy any remaining political appetite you may have after almost two years of campaigning and several hours of watching which states end up red or blue.

All The King's Men - Robert Penn Warren
The Manchurian Candidate - Richard Condon
1984 - George Orwell
Animal Farm - George Orwell
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
Lord of the Flies - William Golding
The Milagro Beanfield War - John Nichols
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich - Alexander Solzhenitsyn


¡Viva Obama!




Click on the screen and get ready to dance.

Later.