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Sudden Fiction Latino: Short-Short Stories from the United States and Latin America » (Original)

Book cover image of Sudden Fiction Latino: Short-Short Stories from the United States and Latin America by Robert Shapard

Authors: Robert Shapard (Editor), James Thomas (Editor), Luisa Valenzuela
ISBN-13: 9780393336450, ISBN-10: 039333645X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Date Published: March 2010
Edition: Original

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Author Biography: Robert Shapard

Robert Shapard teaches literature and creative writing at the University of Hawaii, and co-edited Flash Fiction Forward.

James Thomas teaches literature and creative writing in Yellow Springs, Ohio, and co-edited Flash Fiction Forward.

Ray Gonzalez is one of America’s foremost authors, scholars, and editors in Latino literature.

Book Synopsis

For readers who love great short-short stories, this bountiful anthology is the best of Latin American and U.S. Latino writers.

Publishers Weekly

After the Sudden Fiction and Flash Fiction anthologies, editors Shapard and Thomas teamed with Gonzalez to create this stunning compilation of short shorts (under 1,500 words) by venerated and emerging Latino writers. In Andrea Saenz's “Everyone's Abuelo Can't Have Ridden with Pancho Villa,” the narrator's Grandma Jefa discredits the family legends while holding fast to her own: a prescient dream about the assassination of Bobby Kennedy. Luna Calderon writes about Dia de Los Muertos or, as the social studies teacher in her story calls it, “Day Ah Dallas Mare Toes.” In “Imagining Bisbee,” Alicita Rodriguez recounts the making of a ghost town: “Bisbee's inhabitants want to disappear. They use P.O. boxes and first names. They hide under straw mats and melt into the horizon.” In “Miss Clairol,” Helena María Viramontes describes the transformative makeup ritual of a mother: “The only way Champ knows her mother's true hair color is by her roots, which, like death, inevitably rise to the truth.” The spirited mix of writers also includes Junot Díaz, Sandra Cisneros, Gabriel García Márquez, and Jorge Luis Borges. (Mar.)

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