|
A rich sampling of Hispanic fiction
BY BRUCE TIERNEY It is only recently that Hispanic fiction has touched the mainstream American reader. Certainly there are exceptions, Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Mario Vargas Llosa jump to mind, but they are the exceptions that prove the rule. In the past few years, however, names such as Laura Esquivel, Isabel Allende and Jose Raul Bernardo have breathed new life into a genre of literature long overlooked by the American book-buying public. At this point, few publishers have stepped up to the plate to offer books by Hispanic authors, but this is bound to change, as Hispanics represent the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population. And for the moment, at least, some of the richest fiction to come out of the Americas can be attributed to a handful of superb Hispanic authors.
By Stella Pope Duarte Rayo, $24.95 304 pages, ISBN 0060186372
Another appealing new book from Rayo, the Latino imprint of publisher HarperCollins, is The Republic of East L.A., a collection of barrio vignettes by master storyteller Luis J. Rodriguez. The author is well known in the Hispanic community for his autobiographical Always Running: La Vida Loca, Gang Days in L.A., which won numerous awards including a New York Times Notable Book for 1993. The Republic of East L.A. continues in this tradition, offering brief entrèe into the lives of a rapper, a trio of gangbanger girls, a homeless man, a pair of ex-cons and several other colorful characters of the East Los Angeles neighborhoods. There are no punches pulled, yet amid the rawness and brutality, glimpses of hope and beauty are found at every turn. Rodriguez has published three volumes of poetry, and his lyricism blossoms on every page. A maroon '63 Impala lowrider graces the cover, and its spirit imbues the book. Who says you can't judge a book by its cover?
By Luis J. Rodriguez Rayo, $23.95 288 pages, ISBN 0066212634
Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes is possessed of one of the most resonant voices in literature, Hispanic or otherwise. Through novels such as The Death of Artemio Cruz (1962), The Old Gringo (1985) and The Years with Laura Diaz (2000), Fuentes has won critical acclaim and an international readership. His latest work, Inez , due out in English translation this month, tells two oddly concurrent love stories: one of an orchestra conductor and a singer in wartime Europe, the other of a pair of humans from the distant past, perhaps the first two humans to ever have contact with one another. The two narratives are joined together by the device of a magical crystal seal that allows its holder (and the reader) to traverse between these worlds. This may sound like a science fiction novel, but nothing could be further from the truth. It reads rather more like a grown-up version of C.S. Lewis' The Chronicles of Narnia, in which a supernatural armoire provided the doorway between the "real" world and an alternate fantasy world (and left the reader to decide which was which). Inez is a short novel, just over 100 pages, but so rich and filling that it can only be devoured in pieces, allowing time to digest between courses; it is profound and poetic, a love story for the ages.
By Carlos Fuentes Farrar, Straus, $18.00 112 pages, ISBN 0374175535
|