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Reviews for The Latino Reader: An American Literary Tradition from 1542 to the Present

 The Latino Reader magazine reviews

The average rating for The Latino Reader: An American Literary Tradition from 1542 to the Present based on 4 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-05-01 00:00:00
1997was given a rating of 4 stars Larry Smith
This book contains excerpts from a large variety of works by Latino/a authors. I enjoyed a lot of the excerpts given, and in quite a few cases, I believe I will get the full books from where some excerpts were taken. There are only two issues which, once mentioned, will show that there is only one real issue. The first issue, which is not truly an issue, is that because these are excerpts, any story that sucks you in ends in a disappointing incomplete feeling. The 10 or 15 pages of a novel for instance, may grab you but then leave you wanting more. But as this is probably the point of the book (i.e. to get readers to want to read some of these works), this is not a true issue. The second issue, which I do find an issue, is the large amount of poetry selections. Let's all face the truth that no literary professor wishes to admit: more than 95% of poetry just plain sucks, in any language! So when they introduce you to a new author, and mention that this person wrote a few novels, a lot of philosophical essays, some historic works, and some poetry, it is far too often that out of all of those choices, they decide to include 2 or 3 shitty poems rather than one of the essays or an excerpt of prose. This selection process, of giving priority to poems far too often when the author has written a lot of prose, is the only reason I have to deduct a star. All in all, this book is definitely worth reading.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-06-24 00:00:00
1997was given a rating of 5 stars Charles Madison
I read this for a class and I was so impressed. We had to do this for a class... so I'll just post my favorite quotes. 1. Unknown Author The Comanches I shall tell him Cuerno Verde, With his numerous warrior band, Have come to meet the Spaniard, And drive him from this land. That I come from the Napeiste, Bringing him these tidings true, That Oso Pardo and Cabeza Negra, And here to give him battle too. 2. José Martí A Vindication of Cuba …because our half-breeds and city-bread young men are generally of delicate, physique, of suave courtesy, and ready words, hiding under the glove that polices the poem in the hand that fells the foe - are we to be considered, as the Manufacturer does consider us, an "effeminate" people? 3. Pachín Marín In the Album of an Unknown Woman On Paper I set my unpolished lines as a firebrand on a carpet. Poor page this that was a flash of light bathed by my poetry, a shadow. 4. Unknown Author The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez When the sherrifs got there Gregorio gave himself up to go: "You can take me because I'm willing. If you force me, the answer's no." 5. William Carlos Williams All the Fancy Things Or what? a clean air, high up, unoffended by gross ordors 6. Bernardo Vega Memoirs of Bernardo Vega He dedicated the morning session to current news and events of the day, which he received from the latest wireless information bulletins. The afternoon sessions were devoted to more substantial readings of a political and literary nature. A Committee on Reading suggested the books to be read, and their recommendations were voted on by all the workers in the shop. 7. Julia de Burgos Returning There's no longer a voice, or tears, or distant sprigs of grain. No more shipwrecks, or echos, not even anguish; silience itself is dead! What say you, my soul, should I flee? Where could I go where I would not be shadowning my own shadow? 8. Julia de Burgos Farewell to Welfare Island Where is the voice of freedom? freedom to laugh, to move without the heavy phantom of despair? Where is the form of beauty unshaken in its veil simple and pure? Where is the warmth of heaven pouring its dreams of love in broken spirits? 9. John Rechy City of Night (I would stare at it sometimes, in explicably racked with excitement, thinking: If I get a stick miles long and stand on a mountain, I'll puncture Heaven - which I thought of then as an island somewhere in the vast sky - and then Heaven will come tumbling down to earth…) 10. Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzáles I am Joaquín And now! I must choose between the paradox of victory of the spirit, despite physical hunger, or to exist in the grasp of American social neurosis, sterilization of the soul And a full stomach. 11. Alurista must be the season of the witch must be the season of the witch la bruja la llorona she lost her children and she cries en las barrancas of industry her children devoured by computersand the gears 12. Alurista to be fathers once again Chicanos have been born to find a desert for an orchard 13. Rudolfo Anaya Bless me, Ultima And they smashed the fruits and vegetables that surrounded the bed and replaced them with a saddle, horse blankets, bottles of whiskey, a new rope, bridles, chapas, and an old guitar. And they rubbed the stain of the earth from the baby's forehead because man was not to be tied to the earth by free upon it. 14. Oscar "Zeta" Acosta The Revolt of the Cockroach People She charges down the aisle in a black satin dancing dress that shows her beautiful knockers and she carries a golf club in her pretty hands. I am aghast! The Faithful are petrified. No one makes a move for her. Her big zoftig ass shakes as she rushes up to the alter, turn to the pie-eyed man in the red cape, and shouts: ¡QUÉ VIVA LA RAZA! 15. Dolores Prida Beautiful Señoritas Allá en el rancho grande Alla donde vivía Yo era un falca morenita Que triste se quejaba Que trista se quejaabaaa No tengo ni un par de calzones Ni sin remiendos de cuero Ni does ghuevos racheros Y las tortillas quemadas NOT IN THE LATINO READER! 16. Luis Valdez Los Vendidos MEXICAN-AMERICAN: Mr. Congressman, Mr. Chairman, members of the board, honored guests, ladies and gentlemen. (SANCHO and SECRETARY applaud.) Please, please, I come before you an a Mexican-American to tell you about the problems of the Mexican. The problems of the Mexican stem from one thing and one thing alone: He's stupid. He's undeducated. He needs to stay in school. He needs to be ambitious, forward-looking, harder-working. He needs to think American, American, America, AMERICAN, AMERICAN, AMERICAN, GOD BLESS AMERICA! GOD BLESS AMERICA!! 17. Luis Valdez Zoot Suit PACHUCO: You don't deserve it, ese, but you're going to get it anyway. 18. Helena María Viramontes The Moths There comes a time when the sun is defiant. Just about the time when moods change, inevitable seasons of the day, transitions from one color to another, that hour or minute or second when the sun is finally defeated, finally sinks into the realization that it cannot, with all it power to heal or burn, exist forever, there comes an illumination where the sun and earth meet, a final burst of burning red-orange fury reminding us that although ending are inevitable, they are necessary for rebirths, and when that time came, just when I switched on the light in the kitchen to open Abuelita's can of soup, it was probably then that she died. NOT IN THE LATINO READER! 19. Judith Ortiz Cofer The Latin Deli: An Ars Poetica …all wanting the comfort of spoken Spanish, to gaze upon the family portait of her plain wide face, her ample bosom resting on her plump arms, her look of maternal interest as they speak to her and each other of their dreams and their disillusions - how she smiles, understanding, when they walk down the narrow aisles of her store reading the labels of packages aloud, as if they were names of lost lovers: Suspiros, Merengues, the stale candy of everyone's childhood. 20. Rosario Morales and Aurora Levins Morales Ending Poem I am not Taína. I am a late leaf of that ancient tree, And my roots reach into the soil of two Americas. Taína is in me, but there is no way back.
Review # 3 was written on 2018-12-10 00:00:00
1997was given a rating of 5 stars Pawel Wiszniewski
A great and important read. I felt a sense of pride, inspiration, and appreciation when reading many of these works
Review # 4 was written on 2016-11-02 00:00:00
1997was given a rating of 4 stars Stephanie J Renfro
An excellent anthology of Latino/a literature. I was required to read this for a class, but I thoroughly enjoyed reading pieces from authors that I had heard of, but hadn't read before. A good introduction to Latinix literature.


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