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Sanctuary Stories »

Book cover image of Sanctuary Stories by Michael Smith

Authors: Michael Smith
ISBN-13: 9780927534505, ISBN-10: 0927534509
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Bilingual Review/Press
Date Published: January 1996
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Michael Smith

Book Synopsis

Sanctuary Stories is a collection of eighteen short stories and five essays focusing on the lives of Central Americans - people who might be washing dishes in our favorite restaurants, harvesting our crops, cleaning our houses, and taking care of our children. In this book, Michael Smith gives these refugees names, gives them faces, and without a hint of condescension, gives them dignity. The stories range from the depiction of the plight of Central Americans in their home countries to their flight to the United States and the life they experience in this country. Sanctuary Stories adds a necessary and compassionate dimension to the current national debate about the rights of aliens.

Publishers Weekly

These well-intentioned 18 short stories and five essays-it is virtually impossible to tell them apart-reflect archeologist Smith's work with a sanctuary organization in California, but too often they simply chronicle the lives of refugees. In his foreword, he vouches for the veracity of his record, which would be fine if this purported to be simply oral history. What's missing here are the telling details that might transform mere occurrences into literature. Most of these works consist of either the horrific experiences of Central American refugees in their native countries or their horrific experiences in the United States with immigration officials and a new culture. As head of a guerrilla unit, Rafael was assigned to kill his own uncle, while Timoteo's father, Luis, was eventually killed in Guatemala for his union activities. The pieces that step out of straight recounting fare better. In one, a woman making her way by bus to the Bay Area is ``misplaced'' and stays with an American stranger for the weekend, where she is both unnerved and intrigued by such Americana as going hot-tubbing and betting $2 at the racetrack. A few of these are presented in the form of the official declaration that refugees must make in seeking asylum, but while the format is new, the details are no different from those given in the other works. The arbitrary meanness of immigration officials is a running theme, but it is too one-dimensional to be effective. An essay in which Smith admits that the refugees are not only the victims but the perpetrators of bias is more well-rounded. (Nov.)

Table of Contents

Foreword1
Rafael3
The White Van11
Manrico17
Raimundo25
Timoteo33
Faustino43
Flor del Canon57
The Road North71
The Road to the East Bay83
Declaration of Carmen Grande in Support of Her Petition for Asylum93
Declaration of Diego Francisco Juan in Support of His Petition for Asylum104
Declaration of Zoila Calderon in Support of Her Petition for Asylum121
The Interview141
Bad Jokes159
Terror169
Andres179
The Traditional Family187
Gulliver193
Jose Chico201
Cesar207
Prejudice213
Luz in America219
The Cemetery233

Subjects