Dancing in the Santa Ana Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected (a review)
This last weekend, I participated in my friend liz gonzález’s
book launch party at the San Bernardino
History & Railroad Museum inside the San Bernadino Santa Fe Depot. Her book is called
“Dancing in the Santa Ana Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected” (Los Nietos
Press 2018). liz gonzález is amazing. And her book is sublime. She is a San
Bernardino Valley native and goes back four generations.
liz's writing sparkles. It is so vivid, and if voice was
measured in heartbeats, her heart rate would be off the charts. And, liz’s book
is all heart, grounded in family and the geography of the San Bernardino Valley
where she grew up. The craft and skill is evident from the very first page. The
book defies genre. Poems and prose. Part memoir. In it, you hear the voice of
liz along with her mother, grandmother, and sisters.
Her definition of Latinx is one that puts the typical
stereotype on its head. Her narrator is
funny and self deprecating. Take for example this excerpt from her poem,
"Confessions of a Pseudo-Chicana":
"...Mama raised us on Hamburger Helper and Macaroni and
Cheese.
She never even made a pot of beans.
I learned how to make tortillas
from Mrs. MacDougall in home ec.
Mama still uses the recipe."
The book is nostalgic but unsentimental. In most of my
favorite books, place is a character. And, place is everything in liz's work.
California is a character and more specifically and importantly, the Inland
Empire is a character. And even more specific than that, San Bernardino is a
character, a city that has been long neglected from the California literary
discourse. Until now. Take for example this excerpt from liz's poem, "The
Summer Before 9th Grade" where she creates a narrator who is linked to
both past and present, the old and the new, connecting Robert Frost and San
Bernardino.
"I made a pit stop at Esperanza Market
on Mount Vernon Avenue where the butcher
wrapped up a pickled pigs' pig’s foot for me.
With my legs sweat-stuck to the plastic bench seat,
I gnawed that pata to the bone,
cooled off with Robert Frost’s poems.
The bus slanted up Fifth Street to Foothill
while I dove deep into songs of tinkling brooks
and leafless woods until my stop
at the bench on Meridian Avenue."
To read more, you will have to buy the book and it is
available on the press' website at https://squareup.com/store/los-nietos-press/. And see liz's reading and event schedule at http://www.lizgonzalez.com/pages/appearances.html.
You will be blown away.
(Excerpts from poems are from “Dancing in the Santa Ana
Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected” by liz gonzález)
liz's book "Dancing in the Santa Ana Winds: Poems y Cuentos New and Selected" (picture by Juanita E. Mantz) |
A great review! I liked "It is so vivid, and if voice was measured in heartbeats, her heart rate would be off the charts." Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete