9780896727427-0896727424-Breathing, In Dust (The Americas Series)

Breathing, In Dust (The Americas Series)

ISBN-13: 9780896727427
ISBN-10: 0896727424
Edition: 1
Author: Tim Z. Hernandez
Publication date: 2012
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Format: Paperback 192 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780896727427
ISBN-10: 0896727424
Edition: 1
Author: Tim Z. Hernandez
Publication date: 2012
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Format: Paperback 192 pages

Summary

Breathing, In Dust (The Americas Series) (ISBN-13: 9780896727427 and ISBN-10: 0896727424), written by authors Tim Z. Hernandez, was published by Texas Tech University Press in 2012. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Breathing, In Dust (The Americas Series) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Deep within California’s golden agricultural heartland lies a rotten core: the fictional farming community of Catela, where the desperate realities of poverty, drug abuse, violence, and bigotry play out in the lives of cucarachas and coyotes, tweekers and strippers, wetbacks and white trash. Seventeen-year-old Tlaloc, namesake of the Aztec god of fertility and destruction, has grown up among the migrant-worker communities that follow the seasons from Wyoming’s beet fields to the vineyards and packinghouses of the Central Valley. Bearing witness to a gritty landscape of wrenching contrasts, Loc narrates the bitter desires and crushed hopes of his friends and family: his father’s absence and his grandparents’ deaths, Zeta’s reckless abandon, Arturín’s path to prison, Norma’s tragic alienation, the farmworkers’ final tributes to Cesar Chavez, Talina’s choices and compromises. Even so he dares to dream, sensing that somewhere within the cruel beauty that surrounds him may lie his own redemption. Tim Z. Hernandez’s land of pain and plenty, his Catela, evokes the essence of the migrant underclass experience. But more, his stories take us there, into the streets and into the groves, into the back rooms of the carnicerias and the panaderias, onto the tracks, onto the thirsty highways, in scenes that unfold with graphic, breathtaking honesty.

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