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A rich collection of short stories that explore the broad range of Hispanic-American experience in the West. In this rich group of stories, the author explores many themes. ""Archangela's Place"" features a wonderful Mexican character who weaves herself permanently into the lives of an Anglo family-with enduring results. ""Flight"" tackles racial misunderstanding between an urban African-American and a rural Chicano woodcutter. ""Eloy"" and ""Every Head's a World"" are coming-of-age stories that illustrate, in various degrees of tragedy and comedy, the complexities faced by Hispanic-American…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A rich collection of short stories that explore the broad range of Hispanic-American experience in the West. In this rich group of stories, the author explores many themes. ""Archangela's Place"" features a wonderful Mexican character who weaves herself permanently into the lives of an Anglo family-with enduring results. ""Flight"" tackles racial misunderstanding between an urban African-American and a rural Chicano woodcutter. ""Eloy"" and ""Every Head's a World"" are coming-of-age stories that illustrate, in various degrees of tragedy and comedy, the complexities faced by Hispanic-American youth. ""Careful"" is an ironic and humorous story of an encounter between two gay teenagers, one Hispanic and one Anglo, that is admirably honest and compelling in its sensuality. Among the rest are two pure romances, ""Pickup,"" which is like a tormented country-western song, and ""Spring,"" a witty story of love unrequited for forty years until, finally, the elderly lovers can openly and tenderly embrace in a passionate and charming conclusion. The stories in this collection show a wide range of compassion and understanding of the often confusing rules of love in a multicultural world.
Autorenporträt
José Skinner was born in Puerto Rico, raised in Mexico City, and has spent much of his life in Central and South America as well as the American Southwest. He began his writing career as a freelance journalist reporting from Central America in the 1980s. Needing a break from the front lines, Skinner turned down a reporting assignment in war-torn northern Nicaragua. That decision saved his life and launched a career writing fiction. He has been a professional English/Spanish translator and interpreter for more than ten years, primarily in the criminal courts of New Mexico. He was a merit fellow at the Iowa Writer's Workshop through 2002 and now teaches at the University of Texas-Pan American.