Books

Book Review: The Luis Ortega Survival Club by Sonora Reyes

The Luis Ortega Survival Club follows a young teenager, Arianna Ruiz or Ari, and her trauma after getting raped by Luis Ortega at a high school party. Ari is autistic and has selective mutism. At their high school, Ari is known as being a quiet person and therefore is pretty isolated from many of her peers. On the other hand, Luis is well known for being a “ladies’ man” and is often celebrated for it. When rumors start spreading about Ari hooking up with Luis, Ari is sexually harassed by her male peers, which continues to isolate and hurt her. Ari begins to receive notes that say #MeToo along with a tumblr username. She begins talking to the tumblr user and finds an unexpected friend through this experience. She is told to meet in room 205 if she is interested in getting back at Luis. At first, she isn’t interested but decides to go, after being frustrated with her experience. Room 205 reveals a support group of other people that have survived abuse from Luis. Suddenly, Ari has the opportunity to find friendship through her trauma and grow as a survivor.

There are so many layers that were beautifully woven together to deliver such an important story. . . Reyes’ is extremely talented in developing characters that have an in-depth background.

It’s no surprise that this is a five star read. There are so many layers that were beautifully woven together to deliver such an important story, especially for younger audiences. Reyes’ is extremely talented in developing characters that have an in-depth background. Ari’s autism and selective mutism is often discussed along with the discussion of consent. Ari does not like being touched, without warning, therefore, consent for any physical touch is often asked for by her friends and family. I loved that discussions of consent were included in this book because I have not seen much representation on how deep consent can go. It is often talked about in worst case scenarios, but it is important to keep in mind that consent is necessary for any physical interaction, such as touching someone’s shoulder.

Ari’s family also play a key factor in the story. Although her parents live together, they are experiencing trust issues, after her mother cheated on her father. The different family dynamics are illustrated through Ari’s relationships with each of her parents. With her mother, she is often frustrated as she relies on Ari as her “friend” and treats her like a therapist. This is extremely difficult for Ari as she is not a professional therapist and is experiencing her own difficulties. Meanwhile, her relationship with her father is completely different as he is hesitant to discuss his emotions. This depiction of family dysfunction is so important because most of the time, families are depicted as a perfect and harmonious relationship but child/parent relationships can be difficult.

Ari’s friends warmed my heart the entire way. Although she had a rough start with Shawni, she quickly becomes an ally that supports Ari no matter what. She always asks for permission to touch her and always has a pen and paper ready for Ari to use. Even though their friend group revolves around exposing Luis, I love that early on there is a moment where they all state that they want to have friendships outside of their shared trauma. This made the friend group extremely heartwarming and made me so happy that Ari had a new support system.

Due to their talent of telling stories from such important perspectives, Sonora Reyes has become an auto-buy author for me. This book reminded me of the movie, John Tucker Must Die, but with an enormous amount of depth and layers that made it even better!

Content warnings: bullying, slut shaming, sexual harassment, rape culture, and the aftermath of an off-page rape.


Sonora Reyes is a queer second-generation immigrant who attended a Catholic high school. They write fiction full of queer and Latinx characters in a variety of genres. Sonora is also the creator and host of #QPOCChat, a monthly community-building Twitter chat for queer writers of color. They currently live in Arizona, in a multigenerational family home with a small pack of dogs who run the place.

Mariana Felix-Kim (she/her) lives in Washington, D.C. with her lovely cat, Leo. When she is not working in the environmental science field, Mariana is constantly reading. Her favorite genres include non-fiction, thrillers, and contemporary romances. Mariana is half Mexican and half Korean. You can find her on Instagram: @mariana.reads.books

June 2023 Latinx Releases

 

ON SALE JUNE 6

 

Saint Juniper's Folly by Alex Crespo | YOUNG ADULT

For Jaime, returning to the Vermont town of Saint Juniper means returning to a past he's spent eight years trying to forget. After shuttling between foster homes, he hopes to make something out of this fresh start. But every gossip in town already knows his business, and with reminders of his past everywhere, he seeks out solitude into the nearby woods—Saint Juniper's Folly—and does not return.

For Theo, Saint Juniper means being stuck. He knows there's more out there, but he's scared to go find it. His senior year is going to be like all the rest, dull and claustrophobic. That is until he wanders into the Folly and stumbles on a haunted house with an acerbic yet handsome boy trapped—as in physically trapped—inside.

For Taylor, Saint Juniper is a mystery. She tries to practice the magic her dad banned from the house after her mom, an accomplished witch, suddenly died. But without someone to guide her, she's floundering. Then a wide-eyed teenager barges into her life, rambling about a haunted house and a trapped boy. He needs a witch.

The Folly and its ghosts will draw these three teenagers together. But can they each face their demons to forge a bond strong enough to escape the Folly's shadows?

 

Pedro & Daniel by Federico Erebia | Illustrated by Julie Kwon | YOUNG ADULT

Pedro and Daniel are Mexican-American brothers growing up in 1970s Ohio. Their mom doesn't like that Pedro is a spitting image of their darker-skinned father, that Daniel plays with dolls, that neither of the boys love sports like the other kids in their neighborhood. Life at home can be rough—but the boys have an unshakable bond that will last their entire lives.

Pedro & Daniel is a sweeping and deeply personal novel—illustrated with beautiful linework throughout by Julie Kwon—that spans from childhood to teenage years to adulthood, all the while tracing the lives of two brothers who are there for each other when no one else is. Together the brothers manage an abusive home life, school, coming out, first loves, first jobs, and the AIDS epidemic, in a coming-of-age story unlike any other.

 

Secret of the Moon Conch by David Bowles and Guadalupe Garcia McCall | YOUNG ADULT

In modern-day Mexico, Sitlali is all alone after the death of her beloved abuela. Targeted by a dangerous gang member, she flees to the United States to find her father. The night before her journey, she finds an ancient conch shell on the beach and takes it with her as a memento of home.

In 1521, Calizto is trapped in the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, which is besieged by Spanish invaders. He has fought valiantly, but hope for his people is running out. Desperate to escape, he takes up his mother's sacred conch and sounds a plea to the gods.

The conch holds magic neither Sitlali nor Calizto understand, magic that allows them to communicate across centuries--and find comfort in each other as they fight to survive. With each conversation, they fall deeper in love, and as the moon waxes, they become more present to each other. But as danger threatens at every turn, will they ever find a way to truly be together?

 

The Garden of Second Chances by Mona Alvarado Frazier | YOUNG ADULT

Juana's life has taken a dark turn. Accused of her husband’s death, she's now a seventeen-year-old mother, alone and undocumented in a prison cell. No one believes her when she claims she's innocent, not even the prison staff or the gang leader in her block who torments her relentlessly.

Her only solace is in her baby, but as Juana struggles to survive the dangers lurking in prison, the threat outside grows even more terrifying. Her husband's furious family wants to take the child away.

With no hope in sight, Juana discovers a glimmer of light in a small patch of earth in the prison yard. As she nurtures the plants, memories of her mother's strength and resilience surface, pushing Juana to fight for her freedom and her daughter's future. This is a story of courage, hope, and determination in the face of impossible odds.

 

ON SALE JUNE 13

 

Lupe Lopez: Reading Rock Star! by E. E. Charlton-Trujillo and Pat Zietlow Miller | Illustrated by Joe Cepeda | PICTURE BOOK

Famous at Hector P. Garcia Elementary for being the first kid in kindergarten to ever start a band, Lupe Lopez enters first grade seeking a new sort of fame. She's ready to rock and roll straight into the role of Reading Rock Star! But despite her best efforts, the words she thought she knew--now grouped in sentence—only glare back at her. Stuck in Group A with the kids who can't read, she becomes the object of a rival's mockery. Will her beloved band, and her confidence, survive the sting of defeat? Leave it to Lupe to prove that the beat she feels when she taps her pencil isn't so very different from words and sentences—and that a real rock star is someone who doesn't give up. Featuring simple text laced with Spanish words, dynamic illustrations, and a reassuring theme, this sequel to Lupe Lopez: Rock Star Rules! will encourage fledgling readers to keep trying, even if they miss a beat or two.

 

ON SALE JUNE 15

 

Untapped Leadership: Harnessing the Power of Underrepresented Leaders by Jenny Vazquez-Newsum | ADULT NONFICTION

Untapped Leadership examines strategies, capabilities, and contributions from leaders of color and marginalized backgrounds from all walks of life and career stages. Highlighting diverse stories and strategies, this groundbreaking book reveals a different kind of leadership, one that requires an advanced understanding of situational awareness, organizational dynamics, and sound decision-making. Far from being a book only for leaders of color, Untapped Leadership shows that the lessons grounded in BIPOC leadership are lessons for anyone and everyone looking to bring a more nuanced and contextual perspective towards navigating life and career—from readers beginning their leadership journeys to those fortunate to lead teams and organizations through complex and fast-changing environments.

 

ON SALE JUNE 20

 

Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith, and Migration by Alejandra Oliva | ADULT NONFICTION

In Rivermouth, Oliva focuses on the physical spaces that make up different phases of immigration, looking at how language and opportunity move through each of them: from the river as the waterway that separates the U.S. and Mexico, to the table as the place over which Oliva prepares asylum seekers for their Credible Fear Interviews, and finally, to the wall as the behemoth imposition that runs along America's southernmost border.

With lush prose and perceptive insight, Oliva encourages readers to approach the painful questions that this crisis poses with equal parts critique and compassion. By which metrics are we measuring who "deserves" American citizenship? What is the point of humanitarian systems that distribute aid conditionally? What do we owe to our most disenfranchised?

As investigative and analytical as she is meditative and introspective, sharp as she is lyrical, and incisive as she is compassionate, seasoned interpreter Alejandra Oliva argues for a better world while guiding us through the suffering that makes the fight necessary and the joy that makes it worth fighting for.

 

Fresh Dirt from the Grave by Giovanna Rivero| Translated by Isabel Adey | SHORT STORIES

In Fresh Dirt from the Grave, a hillside is "an emerald saddle teeming with evil and beauty." It is this collision of harshness and tenderness that animates Giovanna Rivero's short stories, where no degree of darkness (buried bodies, lost children, wild paroxysms of violence) can take away from the gentleness she shows all violated creatures. A mad aunt haunts her family, two Bolivian children are left on the outskirts of a Metis reservation outside Winnipeg, a widow teaches origami in a women's prison and murders, housefires, and poisonings abound, but so does the persistent bravery of people trying to forge ahead in the face of the world. They are offered cruelty, often, indifference at best, and yet they keep going. Rivero has reworked the boundaries of the gothic to engage with pre-Columbian ritual, folk tales, sci-fi and eroticism, and found in the wound their humanity and the possibility of hope.

 

Martina Has Too Many Tías by Emma Otheguy | Illustrated by Sara Palacios | PICTURE BOOK

Martina does not like parties. Parties are full of tías with their flashy fashions and boom-and-bellow laughter that's too much for quiet Martina. At least with all that noise, no one notices when she slips away. She finds herself in a magical place: a warm, familiar island where she can finally play in peace and quiet. Martina is home at last--or is she?

 

ON SALE JUNE 27

 

Anarchist Popular Power: Dissident Labor and Armed Struggle in Uruguay, 1956-76 by Troy Andreas Araiza Kokinis | ADULT NONFICTION

Araiza Kokinis's study of the Uruguayan Anarchist Federation (FAU) broadens our understanding of the Cold War-era political landscape beyond the capitalism-communism and Old Left-New Left binaries that dominate the historiography of the epoch.

Arguably the most impactful anarchist organization globally in the Cold War era, the FAU viewed everyday people as revolutionary protagonists and sought to develop a popular counter-subjectivity through accumulating experiences directly challenging the market and the state. The FAU argued that everyday people transformed into revolutionary subjects through the regular practice of collective direct action in labor unions, student organizations, and neighborhood councils. Their slogan was "create popular power," and their praxis differed from nationalist strains of Marxism at the time. The strategies and tactics promoted by FAU, ones in which everyday people took on roles as historical protagonists, offered the largest threat to maintaining social order in Uruguay and thus spawned a military takeover of the state to dismantle and deflate their vibrant popular revolt.

 

Tenacious: Fifteen Adventures Alongside Disabled Athletes by Patty Cisneros Prevo | Illustrated by Dion Mbd | PICTURE BOOK

A downhill skier whose blindness has sharpened her communication skills. An adaptive surfer who shreds waves while sitting down. A young man who excels at wheelchair motocross—but struggles with math. Tenacious tells their stories and more, revealing the daily joys and challenges of life as an athlete with disabilities.

These competitors have won gold medals, set world records, climbed mountain peaks, claimed national championships, and many more extraordinary achievements. Get to know them in Tenacious!

 

ON SALE JUNE 30

 

A Night of Screams: Latino Horror Stories | Edited by Richard Z. Santos | SHORT STORIES

This riveting collection of horror stories—and four poems—contains a wide range of styles, themes and authors. Creepy creatures roam the pages, including La Llorona and the Chupacabras in fresh takes on Latin American lore, as well as ghosts, zombies and shadow selves. Migrants continue to pass through Rancho Altamira where Esteban’s family has lived for generations, but now there are two types: the living and the dead. A young man returns repeatedly to the scary portal down which his buddy disappeared. A woman is relieved to receive multiple calls from her cousin following Hurricane María in Puerto Rico, but she is stunned to later learn her prima died the first night of the storm! There’s plenty of blood and gore in some stories, while others are mysterious and suspenseful. Contributors include Ann Davila Cardinal, V. Castro, Ruben Degollado, Richie Narvaez, Lilliam Rivera and Ivelisse Rodriguez.

Review and Author Q & A: Plátanos Are Love by Alyssa Reynoso Morris; Illustrated by Mariyah Rahman

I grew up eating platanos: mangú, tostones and maduros (or fritos as we like to call them in our household,) so you can imagine how excited I was when I learned of a children’s book dedicated to one of my first loves!

Plátanos Are Love by Alyssa Reynoso Morris is a beautiful homage to culture, history, traditions and family. The story starts with a young girl who goes produce shopping with her grandmother. This introduction sets the foundation for the journey in which the little girl takes the reader. As she learns from her grandmother how to cook plátanos, in a variety of ways, she also learns about the importance that they hold in her ancestral history. Ultimately, we find the young girl passing on the knowledge of what her grandmother has taught her, in the kitchen, to her little sister; giving us a full circle heartfelt moment.

The book is filled with wondrous attention to detail, starting with the beautiful bright illustrations by Mariyah Rahman. From the grandmothers hoop earrings, to the array of hairstyles on the characters, I felt seen. The Spanish interwoven throughout the story, welcomes us to a Spanglish filled world; one many of us can recognize. However, it’s the reader care that we see via a glossary, for those unfamiliar with the Spanish words, and the recipes for the wonderful dishes, mentioned throughout the book, that really brings the book together.

I had the opportunity to ask Alyssa Reynoso Morris a few questions about Plátanos Are Love. She spoke about the inspiration behind the book, the importance of knowing our history, what we can expect next from her and of course, how she prefers her plátanos.

“Plátanos Are Love” by Alyssa Reynoso Morris is a beautiful homage to culture, history, traditions and family.

Tiffany Gonzalez (TG): What or who inspired you to write this book? 

Alyssa Reynoso Morris (ARM): I wanted to be a writer since I was 7 years old because I grew up with my Abuela—the original storyteller. She had a second-grade education, but that didn’t stop her from telling the best stories that captivated EVERYONE’S attention. I remember looking up to her and wanting to be like her. I think she knew that because she would rope me into “helping” her tell her stories. These are some of my fondest memories as well as the time we spent in the kitchen together. My love of my Abuela, her stories, and the food we made together inspired Plátanos Are Love.

TG: Immediately, I was drawn in by the Spanish words and loved the strong presence that "Spanglish" had throughout the book. It reminded me of my upbringing and of my day to day, in all honesty. Was that always the intention or did that come later on in the process of bringing this book together? 

ARM: I love this question. The Spanglish was intentional. Growing up I spoke Spanish at home and English in school. Then as I got older my English proficiency outpaced my Spanish. I found myself speaking in Spanish and in Spanglish every chance I got to preserve the language. With time I learned to take pride in my Spanglish and my goal with my writing is for it to be as authentic as possible. When I started writing it I had sprinkled in Spanish and fortunately my editor asked me to lean into it more, so I did and I'm proud of what we created.

TG: The history of our ancestors played a very important role in the book. Can you speak on why this was important for you to highlight?

ARM: I'm a political science major and I'm obsessed with how our history affects our present. Growing up I learned about Trujillo and the Parsley Massacre but I didn't learn about slavery and colonization until I was in school. I think it's important for kids to learn where they come from. I think kids should know how resilient their ancestors were so they know they are also resilient and can do anything they set their mind to. 

TG: It's essential for kids to see books that reflect their cultures; that reflect who they are. The one book I read as a child that highlighted Dominican culture has stayed with me till this day. Will you be continuing this work with future projects? Can we expect other aspects of Dominican/Puerto Rican culture or even just latinidad highlighted? 

ARM: I love this question and the answer is YES you can expect more Latinidad to come in my future works. My Dominican and Puerto Rican culture and experiences are such huge parts of my identity and storytelling that I can't tell stories without incorporating it in. My second book The Bronx Is My Home is a love letter to the Bronx from the perspective of a Black Puertorican boy. There are references to Latiné heroes like Sonia Sotomayor and AOC. My third book is called Gloriana Presente: A First Day of School Book and it starts with Gloriana's Abuela soothes her first day of school nerves by telling her stories about their family home in la República Dominicana. Gloriana is uncertain about how to exist between her two homes, or how to make new friends between her two languages. This imaginative picture book celebrates the magic of existing in-between, and the transformative power of self-soothing to build confidence. I think immigrants and particularly the Latiné/x/o community will resonate with the text. 

TG: Okay, if you had to choose one: tostones, maduros or mangú? And why? 

ARM: Asking me to pick one is like asking me what my favorite book is. I just can't choose one because it really depends on my mood. When I want something sweet I go for maduros. When I want something crispy I go for tostones. Mangú is great when I want to feel full and am trying to be healthier as it's not fried. I also love mofongo, pastelon, and alcapurias but we needed to edit them out of the book because the manuscript was getting too long.


Alyssa Reynoso-Morris is a queer Afro-Latinx Dominican and Puerto Rican writer, wife, mother, and community organizer. During the day she is a chief of staff working with community members, nonprofit organizations, and government officials to make the world a better place. Then she puts her writer's hat on to craft heartfelt stories about home, family, food, and the fun places she has been. Alyssa was born and raised in the Bronx and currently lives in Philadelphia with her partner and daughter. Alyssa is honored to be a Musa with Las Musas Books which celebrates the diversity of voice, experience, and power of Latinx children's authors. She hopes you enjoy her stories. You can visit her website at alyssaauthor.com.

Mariyah Rahman was born and raised in Trinidad and Tobago. She spent her earliest years climbing trees, digging for fossils, and drawing on walls with crayons. Today she is an illustrator for children's books and entertainment but has still never found a fossil.

Tiffany Gonzalez is the Marketing Manager at Astra House and the Communications Co-Director for Latinx In Publishing. She previously worked in Production at HarperCollins Publishers. She has worked on the Publicity and Marketing campaign for Dreaming of You by Melissa Lozada-Oliva and on the Marketing campaigns for Becoming Abolitionists by Derecka Purnell, The Sex Lives of African Women by Nana Darkoa Sekiyamah and National Book Award Fiction Finalist The Town of Babylon by Alejandro Varela. She has earned her Bachelors and Master's degrees from Rutgers University - NB. She is Dominican-American and fluid in Spanish. She is a Publisher’s Weekly 2022 Star Watch Honoree. You can follow her on Instagram @wandering_tiff_ or visit her website at wanderingtiff.com

Four Anthologies to Read in 2023

Anthologies have so much to love about them. They provide multiple stories in just one book where the author can showcase many aspects of their writing style. There are always new characters to meet, new plots to read, and new worlds to lose yourself in. 

Here are four anthologies that you should read in 2023.


Wild Tongues Can't Be Tamed:
15 Voices from the Latinx Diaspora
edited by Saraciea J. Fennell

This anthology, edited by Latinx in Publishing Board Chair Saraciea J. Fennell, is composed of well-known and up-and-coming authors who challenge the myths and stereotypes that surround the Latinx diaspora. 

“In Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed, writers from across the Latinx diaspora interrogate the different myths and stereotypes about this rich and diverse community. From immigration to sexuality, music to language, and more, these personal essays and poems are essential additions to the cultural conversation, sure to inspire hope and spark dialogue.

The bestselling and award-winning contributors include Elizabeth Acevedo, Cristina Arreola, Ingrid Rojas Contreras, Naima Coster, Natasha Diaz, Kahlil Haywood, Zakiya Jamal, Janel Martinez, Jasminne Mendez, Meg Medina, Mark Oshiro, Julian Randall, Lilliam Rivera, and Ibi Zoboi.”

 

The Book of Wanderers
by Reyes Ramirez

If you want an anthology that’s filled with unique worlds and characters across different genres, these short stories by Reyes Ramirez are for you.

“The collection follows multiple characters of Mexican &/or Salvadoran descent in past, present, and future settings inspired by Houston. Readers will recognize many of the landmarks and cultural influences of H-Town in The Book of Wanderers, whether it be pro wrestling, driving on I-45, roadside memorials, the Ship Channel, and even its unique radio DJs. However, as the stories progress, their genres stray further from reality, ranging from hallucinatory realism to science fiction to the post-apocalyptic. Houston is a cosmopolitan metropolis in Texas that’s part of the South, West, and Southwest on the Gulf Coast that encompasses the urban, suburban, and rural while being near the Borderlands with connections to the cosmos through NASA.”

 

How to Date a Flying Mexican:
New and Collected Stories
by Daniel A. Olivas

This whimsical anthology by Daniel A. Olivas intertwines Chicana/o and Mexican culture and history such as gods, curanderismo, education, immigration, and more.

How to Date a Flying Mexican is a collection of stories derived from Chicano and Mexican culture but ranging through fascinating literary worlds of magical realism, fairy tales, fables, and dystopHow to Date a Flying Mexicanian futures. Many of Daniel A. Olivas's characters confront—both directly and obliquely— questions of morality, justice, and self-determination.

The collection is made up of Olivas's favorite previously published stories, along with two new stories—one dystopian and the other magical—that challenge the Trump administration's anti-immigration rhetoric and policies. How to Date a Flying Mexican draws together some of Olivas's most unforgettable and strange tales, allowing readers to experience his very distinct, and very Chicano, fiction.”

 

Her Body and Other Parties
by Carmen Maria Machado

Within these thought-provoking and captivating stories, Carmen Maria Machado presents the reality that surrounds violence against women and their bodies.

“In Her Body and Other Parties, Carmen Maria Machado blithely demolishes the arbitrary borders between psychological realism and science fiction, comedy and horror, fantasy and fabulism. While her work has earned her comparisons to Karen Russell and Kelly Link, she has a voice that is all her own. In this electric and provocative debut, Machado bends genre to shape startling narratives that map the realities of women’s lives and the violence visited upon their bodies.”


Melissa Gonzalez (she/her) is a UCLA graduate with a major in American Literature & Culture and a minor in Chicana/o & Central American Studies. She loves boba, horror movies, and reading. You can spot her in the fiction, horror/mystery/thriller, and young adult sections of bookstores. Though she is short, she feels as tall as her TBR pile. You can find Melissa on her book Instagram: @floralchapters

Book Review: What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez by Claire Jiménez

In 1996, Ruthy Ramirez disappeared without a trace. The Staten Island 13-year-old had gone to school and then to track practice, but never made it home.

Nina—the youngest of the three Ramirez girls—always thought her sister Ruthy was invincible: the “Queen of the Quick Comeback, hoop earrings and Vaseline, Patron Saint of the Fist and the Late-Night Call Home from the Principal. Who in the world could touch her, my sister?”

The family searched for her and sought the help of cops. But their efforts to find Ruthy were unsuccessful, and the years stretched on. The Ramirez girls’ father, Eddie, would later die. The remaining Ramirez women—Nina, eldest sister Jessica, and their mother, Dolores—continue on, somehow. Still, the heavy question of Ruthy’s whereabouts and her wellbeing continues to hang over them. And this same question becomes too great to manage 12 years later, when Jessica sees who she thinks is Ruthy on Catfight, a vulgar reality show that pits women against one another. Like Ruthy, "Ruthy/Ruby"—as Nina calls the woman behind the screen—is Puerto Rican, has red hair, and the same brown beauty mark beneath her left eye.

Could this woman—alive, breathing and whose way of speaking is eerily familiar—be their long-missing sister?

Claire Jiménez’s powerful debut novel, What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez, explores the ways in which a family’s reality can be shattered, in more ways than one. Jiménez brings a rich portrait of fierce Puerto Rican women, the bonds that tie them, and what becomes of their lives after tragedy.

There’s a bigger story about grief and how a family can be fractured, after tragedy strikes, as well as how undying love can spur a quest for answers: in this novel, the quest is a plan hatched by Jessica and Nina to drive to where the reality show is filmed, find Ruthy, and bring her home.

Jiménez starts the story by introducing the reader to Nina, Jessica and Dolores, and what’s become of them in her absence. Ever since college, Nina had largely avoided her family. As she explains, it “hurt her too much to see up close what had happened to” them over the years. Meanwhile, the older sister, Jessica, has been overextending herself by juggling a demanding job as a nurse, a baby, and looking after their mother, Dolores. Then one day, an overwhelmed and fed-up Jessica tells Nina that it’s her turn to take on the responsibility of helping care for their mother. Having been rejected by medical schools, Nina returns to Staten Island and reluctantly takes a $7.50-an-hour job at Mariposa’s, a lingerie store at the Staten Island Mall. Dolores, a widow who still carries the unbearable weight of the guilt over Ruthy’s disappearance, is in the middle of the two sisters. She’s an endearing and hilarious character—a religious woman who can go to church and rain expletives on someone without hesitation.

Jiménez brings a rich portrait of fierce Puerto Rican women, the bonds that tie them, and what becomes of their lives after tragedy. . . At the root, this story is about love.

Jiménez does not shy away from heavy subjects and instead grips them and unfolds them for readers: generational violence, trauma, and the long-reaching effects of colonialism on the Puerto Rican diaspora are some of the themes addressed in the book. In one chapter, Nina confesses that she’d always been afraid of her Pentecostal mother and the way Dolores has overperformed her role. “For so many years, it had felt like she was trying to overcompensate, for having kids so young or for growing up poor or for being Puerto Rican,” Nina says of Dolores. Jiménez explores these themes with remarkable freedom and, many times, snark and humor. And it is because of the writer’s fearlessness on the page that What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez feels like an easy read. The novel is both heartbreaking and funny, fragile and honest.

One noteworthy element of this story is Jiménez’s unflinching hold on the United States’ obsession with reality TV. Through Catfight—the fictional reality TV that maybe Ruthy stars in—the author paints a highly-toxic and harmful environment for women, which resemble familiar reality television shows. The cast of Catfight badmouth and betray each other, and have to literally fight to stay on the show. The author lays bare how Black and Brown women themselves often become centers of humiliation, and even violence, for the sake of others’ entertainment. As readers follow along, they’re challenged on what is true about the contestants’ real lives outside of the show, and what’s not. Jiménez forces readers to sit with the fact that this is the type of content many love to watch—“guilty pleasures” or “trashy reality shows.” What does that say about the representation of Black and Brown women? And what does that say about the viewer?

As a society we’re used to learning about the last day a missing person was seen through witness statements and surveillance video. In the U.S. there’s also disproportionate media coverage of Black and Brown girls who go missing. Jiménez shines a brutal light on this issue by lending voice to Ruthy herself. Early on, the reader gets an introduction to Ruthy and her version of her story; a slow pan of her last day at school before her disappearance. Chapter 4 begins by telling readers that, in order to know what happened to Ruthy Ramirez, then they need to understand what happened that day at school. It’s a brilliant decision by Jiménez to have Ruthy share her own truth. In less than a handful of chapters, readers are given a glimpse into who Ruthy is at 13, with her “crazy-ass moms,” sisters and dad in a little pink town house.

At the root, this story is about love. The Ramirez women, though flawed and complicated (because who isn’t?), love one another fiercely. And they won’t stop trying to fill the gaping hole that once held Ruthy.


Claire Jiménez is a Puerto Rican writer who grew up in Brooklyn and Staten Island, New York. She is the author of the short story collection Staten Island Stories (Johns Hopkins Press, December 2019), which received the 2019 Hornblower Award for a first book from the New York Society Library. Jimenez is a PhD student in English with a concentration in ethnic studies and digital humanities at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. She received her MFA from Vanderbilt University. Recently, she was a research fellow at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College. In 2020, she was awarded a Mellon Foundation grant from the U.S Latino Digital Humanities Program at the University of Houston. Currently, she is an assistant fiction editor at Prairie Schooner. Her fiction, essays and reviews have appeared in Remezcla, Afro-Hispanic Review, PANK, The Rumpus, el roommate, Eater, District Lit, The Toast and the Los Angeles Review of Books, among other publications.

Amaris Castillo is an award-winning journalist, writer, and the creator of Bodega Stories, a series featuring real stories from the corner store. Her writing has appeared in La Galería Magazine, Aster(ix) Journal, Spanglish Voces, PALABRITAS, Dominican Moms Be Like… (part of the Dominican Writers Association’s #DWACuenticos chapbook series), and most recently Quislaona: A Dominican Fantasy Anthology. She has new work forthcoming in Sana, Sana: Latinx Pain and Radical Visions for Healing and Justice, out in July from Common Notions Press. Her short story, “El Don,” was a prize finalist for the 2022 Elizabeth Nunez Caribbean-American Writers’ Prize by the Brooklyn Caribbean Literary Festival. She is a proud member of Latinx in Publishing’s Writers Mentorship Class of 2023 and lives in the Tampa Bay area with her family and dog, Brooklyn.

Book Review: You Don’t Have A Shot by Racquel Marie

You Don’t Have A Shot by Racquel Marie follows a high school girl, Vale, and her passion for soccer. Vale goes to her childhood soccer camp but is upset when her nemesis, Leticia, is co-captaining her team. The stakes are high as college scouts will be attending the game, which could determine Vale’s future as a soccer player. Vale is forced to rely on Leticia to join forces to coach a successful soccer team but it ends up blossoming to something more than a shared love of soccer.

This book has it all. . . There are so many reasons to read Marie’s books. Consider this your sign to pick one up next!

Racquel Marie has become an auto-buy author for me because she captures such important perspectives in her novels. Her books are alway five stars reads! I absolutely loved Ophelia After All and thought it was going to be a tough book to beat. However, I loved You Don’t have a Shot just as much, but for different reasons. This book not only represents such an important component of latinx culture, fútbol, but also blends the perspective of being a latinx daughter with high hopes for college, while exploring their sexuality.

Vale is a flawed character but I love that Marie depicted her in this way. As insufferable as she was in the beginning, Marie uses this as a foundation to create a compelling character development arc. Vale makes mistakes by selfishly focusing on her future but Leticia perfectly compliments her and encourages her to zoom out her perspective to help others succeed. It was heartwarming seeing Vale and Leticia come together to empower a group of women to work together to win soccer games.

In addition, I also highly respected and sympathized with Marie’s inclusion of losing a mother, based on her own experiences. This was delivered in such a personal and vulnerable way that made it extremely touching to experience.

This book has it all: enemies to lovers trope, latinx representation, LGBTQIA+ representation, character development, underdog trope, and so much more! There are so many reasons to read Marie’s books. Consider this your sign to pick one up next!

Content warnings: off-page maternal death by breast cancer, maternal grief, mentions of underage drinking, depictions of paternal emotional abuse, depictions of anxiety/panic attacks, discussions and depictions of sports-related injuries (primarily a sprained wrist), condemned homophobia, condemned xenophobia, off-page teenage cancer patient, and condemned mention of exclusionary transphobia in sports


Racquel Marie grew up in Southern California, where her passion for storytelling of all kinds was encouraged by her friends and big family. She received a BA in English with an emphasis in creative writing and a minor in gender and sexuality studies from the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Ophelia After All, You Don't Have a Shot, and many unfinished first drafts.

Mariana Felix-Kim (she/her) lives in Washington, D.C. with her lovely cat, Leo. When she is not working in the environmental science field, Mariana is constantly reading. Her favorite genres include non-fiction, thrillers, and contemporary romances. Mariana is half Mexican and half Korean. You can find her on Instagram: @mariana.reads.books

May 2023 Latinx Releases

 

ON SALE MAY 2

 

Ander & Santi Were Here by Jonny Garza Villa | YOUNG ADULT

The Santos Vista neighborhood of San Antonio, Texas, is all Ander Martínez has ever known. The smell of pan dulce. The mixture of Spanish and English filling the streets. And, especially their job at their family's taquería. It's the place that has inspired Ander as a muralist, and, as they get ready to leave for art school, it's all of these things that give them hesitancy. That give them the thought, are they ready to leave it all behind?

To keep Ander from becoming complacent during their gap year, their family "fires" them so they can transition from restaurant life to focusing on their murals and prepare for college. That is, until they meet Santiago López Alvarado, the hot new waiter. Falling for each other becomes as natural as breathing. Through Santi's eyes, Ander starts to understand who they are and want to be as an artist, and Ander becomes Santi's first steps toward making Santos Vista and the United States feel like home.

Until ICE agents come for Santi, and Ander realizes how fragile that sense of home is. How love can only hold on so long when the whole world is against them. And when, eventually, the world starts to win.

 

The Golden Frog Games (Witchlings 2) by Claribel A. Ortega | MIDDLE GRADE

Every four years, the Twelve Towns gather for a legendary magical tournament—the Golden Frog Games.

With Ravenskill hosting this year's games, all eyes are on Seven Salazar, Valley Pepperhorn and Thorn Laroux: the most famous Spares in the Twelve Towns. Thorn is ready to compete as a fashion champion, but when a forbidden hex is used to turn her fellow champions to stone, suspicion lands on the Witchlings.

As the Witchlings attempt to unravel the mystery of the stonifications, future Uncle Seven is harboring a dangerous secret: While she's supposed to be able to communicate with animals, the voices she hears most clearly belong to monstruos, and one spine-chilling voice is the loudest of all.

Can Seven fix her broken magic and find out who is stonifying the champions . . . before Thorn becomes the next victim?

 

The Weight of Everything by Marcia Argueta Mickelson | YOUNG ADULT

With her dad's drinking and spending getting out of control, Sarah struggles to make sure that the bills are paid, that her brother is fed and safe, that her dad's grief won't crush them all. She has no time for art, unless she's cranking out a piece to sell online for some grocery money. And she definitely doesn't have the time or the emotional energy to find out if her sweet, handsome classmate, David Garza, could be more than a friend.

But then a school project prompts Sarah to delve into her mom's Mexican and Guatemalan roots. As she learns more about this side of her heritage, Sarah starts to understand her mom better—and starts to face her own grief. When she stumbles upon a long-buried piece of history that mattered deeply to her mom, Sarah realizes she can't carry her pain silently anymore. She has to speak up, and she can't do it alone.

 

Nuncaseolvida by Alejandra Algorta; Illustrated by Iván Rickenmann | YOUNG ADULT

Fabio flies through the streets of Bogotá on his bicycle, the children of his neighborhood trailing behind him. It is there that life feels right—where the world of adults, and their lies, fades away. But then one day, he simply forgets. Forgets how to ride his bicycle. And Fabio will never be the same again. From Colombia comes a special debut talent, Alejandra Algorta, and a first novel of discovery and heartbreak. Algorta’s distinct and poetic prose has been translated by award-winning author Aida Salazar

Also available in English.

 

ON SALE MAY 9

 

My Dog Just Speaks Spanish by Andrea Cáceres | PICTURE BOOK

When Aurora came to the United States, she learned to speak English. But her spaniel, Nena, did not. Sweet Nena loves to give besos, and she knows only Spanish. She doesn’t know SIT, but she does know SIÉNTATE. She doesn’t know WAIT, but she does know ESPERA. And while TREAT doesn’t mean anything to Nena, she can certainly sniff out a POSTRE! At the park, Nena may not know what the other dog owners are saying, but she and Aurora will always understand each other just fine. Borrowing from her lived experience, Venezuelan-American author-illustrator Andrea Cáceres offers a gentle, charmingly illustrated ode to love that extends a hand—or a paw—to readers who may feel displaced or are learning a new language themselves.

 

You Don't Have a Shot by Racquel Marie | YOUNG ADULT

Valentina "Vale" Castillo-Green's life revolves around soccer. Her friends, her future, and her father's intense expectations are all wrapped up in the beautiful game. But after she incites a fight during playoffs with her long-time rival, Leticia Ortiz, everything she's been working toward seems to disappear.

Embarrassed and desperate to be anywhere but home, Vale escapes to her beloved childhood soccer camp for a summer of relaxation and redemption...only to find out that she and the endlessly aggravating Leticia will be co-captaining a team that could play in front of college scouts. But the competition might be stiffer than expected, so unless they can get their rookie team's act together, this second chance—and any hope of playing college soccer—will slip through Vale's fingers. When the growing pressure, friendship friction, and her overbearing father push Vale to turn to Leticia for help, what starts off as a shaky alliance of necessity begins to blossom into something more through a shared love of soccer. . . and maybe each other.

 

Nine Stray Shots by Jesús Miguel Soto | ADULT FICTION

In these nine short stories, the absurd breaks into the territory of the reality until it takes the reader into the kingdom of the extraordinary, from where there is no turning back.

Five friends establish a new country inside their apartment and set out to defend it with their teeth. The sensual voice of a jazz singer disturbs the life of a musician to the point of driving him mad. A jaded married couple receives a mysterious black box on their doorstep that will bring them together again. In the midst of a war that seemed distant, three children and their tutor repeat over and over again the same form of death. A mobster tells a crime as if it had already happened, but in reality he is anticipating it. On their honeymoon, a couple of newlyweds get lost in a remote and mysterious village that does not appear on any map and end up involved in a crime that will accompany them for years.

Between the fantastic, the absurd, the extravagant and the crude reality, these short stories are a winding path for the reader to venture into their own stray.

 

In Vitro: On Longing and Transformation by Isabel Zapata; Translated by Myers | ADULT NONFICTION

Medical interventions become an exercise in patience, desire, and delirium in this intimate account of bodily transformation and disruption. In candid, graceful prose, Isabel Zapata gives voice to the strangeness and complexities of conception and motherhood that are rarely discussed publicly. Zapata frankly addresses the misogyny she experienced during fertility treatments, explores the force of grief in imagining possible futures, and confronts the societal expectations around maternity. In the tradition of Rivka Galchen's Little Labors and Sarah Manguso's Ongoingness, In Vitro draws from diary and essay forms to create a new kind of literary companion and open up space for nuanced conversations about pregnancy.

 

Our Migrant Souls: A Meditation on Race and the Meanings and Myths of "Latino" by Héctor Tobar | ADULT NONFICTION

"Latino" is the most open-ended and loosely defined of the major race categories in the United States. Our Migrant Souls: A Meditation on Race and the Meanings and Myths of "Latino" assembles the Pulitzer Prize winner Héctor Tobar's personal experiences as the son of Guatemalan immigrants and the stories told to him by his Latinx students to offer a spirited rebuke to racist ideas about Latino people. Our Migrant Souls decodes the meaning of "Latino" as a racial and ethnic identity in the modern United States, and seeks to give voice to the angst and anger of young Latino people who have seen latinidad transformed into hateful tropes about "illegals" and have faced insults, harassment, and division based on white insecurities and economic exploitation.

Investigating topics that include the US-Mexico border "wall," Frida Kahlo, urban segregation, gangs, queer Latino utopias, and the emergence of the cartel genre in TV and film, Tobar journeys across the country to expose something truer about the meaning of "Latino" in the twenty-first century.

 

ON SALE MAY 16

 

As Brave as a Lion by Erika Meza | PICTURE BOOK

When she and her lion are together, one little girl feels like she can do anything. Whether she's afraid of the dark, or too shy to speak and in need of finding her voice, her big, bold companion always looks out for her. But one day, the inseparable pair decide to climb the new, dizzyingly high rocket slide at the playground together, and the girl discovers that even lions sometimes get afraid. Can she summon the strength to be his lion when he needs her? Joyful, expressive artwork glowing with bright primary colors brings to life the story of a special bond—and a child's discovery of unexpected courage.

 

Rubi Ramos's Recipe for Success by Jessica Parra | YOUNG ADULT

Graduation is only a few months away, and Rubi Ramos's "recipe for success" to get into prestigious Alma University is already off track.

When Alma waitlists Rubi's application, Rubi will need to be distraction-free to make the grade and keep her parents—who have wanted this for her for years—from finding out. Which means falling for her cute surfer-slash-math tutor, Ryan, definitely won't work. And neither will breaking her mother's ban on baking—her parents didn't leave Cuba so she could bake just like them.

But some recipes are begging to be tampered with.

When the First Annual Bake Off comes to town, Rubi's passion for baking goes from subtle simmer to full boil. Add to the mix her crush on Ryan may be turning into a full-fledged relationship and Rubi's life is suddenly so different from what it was. She's not sure if she has what it takes to win the Bake Off, or where the relationship with Ryan is going, but there's only one way to find out--even if it means going against her parents' priorities.

Now Rubi must differentiate between the responsibility of unfulfilled dreams she holds and finding the path she's meant for.

 

Venom & Vow by Anna-Marie McLemore and Elliott McLemore | YOUNG ADULT

Cade McKenna is a transgender prince who's doubling for his brother. Valencia Palafox is a young dama attending the future queen of Eliana. Gael Palma is the infamous boy assassin Cade has vowed to protect. Patrick McKenna is the reluctant heir to a kingdom, and the prince Gael has vowed to destroy.

Cade doesn't know that Gael and Valencia are the same person. Valencia doesn't know that every time she thinks she's fighting Patrick, she's fighting Cade. And when Cade and Valencia blame each other for a devastating enchantment that takes both their families, neither of them realizes that they have far more dangerous enemies.

Cowritten by married writing team Anna-Marie and Elliott McLemore, Venom & Vow is a lush and powerful YA novel about owning your power and becoming who you really are—no matter the cost.

 

Cousins by Aurora Venturini; Translated by Kit Maude | ADULT FICTION

Cousins, widely regarded as Venturini's masterpiece, is the story of four women from an impoverished, dysfunctional family in La Plata, Argentina, who are forced to suffer through a series of ordeals, including illegal abortions, miscarriages, sexual abuse, disfigurement, and murder, narrated by a daughter whose success as a painter offers her a chance to achieve economic independence and help her family as best as she can.

Neighborhood mythologies, family, female sexuality, vengeance, and social mobility through art are explored and scrutinized in the unmistakable voice of Yuna—who stares wildly at the world in which she is compelled to live—a voice unique in contemporary literature whose unconventional style can be candid, brutal, sharp, and utterly breathtaking.

 

The Enchanted Hacienda by J. C. Cervantes | ADULT FICTION

When Harlow Estrada is abruptly fired from her dream job and her boyfriend proves to be a jerk, her world turns upside down. She flees New York City to the one place she can always call home—the enchanted Hacienda Estrada.

The Estrada family farm in Mexico houses an abundance of charmed flowers cultivated by Harlow's mother, sisters, aunt, and cousins. By harnessing the magic in these flowers, they can heal hearts, erase memories, interpret dreams—but not Harlow. So when her mother and aunt give her a special task involving the family's magic, she panics. How can she rise to the occasion when she is magicless? But maybe it's not magic she's missing, but belief in herself. When she finally embraces her unique gifts and opens her heart to a handsome stranger, she discovers she's far more powerful than she imagined.

 

ON SALE MAY 21

 

I Can Be... Me! by Lesléa Newman; Illustrated by Maya Gonzalez | PICTURE BOOK

In this lighthearted story, a group of six, colorfully clad children exuberantly explore— through play—the many ways they can be themselves. They are free to embrace all kinds of activities, reveling in the fun of trying new things and discovering new ways of being. They can shoot baskets, dance around a room, weave ribbons through their hair, swim like a mermaid, and more. There is no right way or wrong way. There are no binary expectations. Children explore their individuality through whatever kinds of play appeal to them.

With lively, gender-neutral rhyming verses and fun, gender-bending images, author Lesléa Newman and illustrator Maya Christina Gonzalez invite young readers into a space where creativity and acceptance are enjoyed by all, and where each child will be inspired to say, "I can be... me!"

 

ON SALE MAY 23

 

The Luis Ortega Survival Club by Sonora Reyes | YOUNG ADULT

Ariana Ruiz wants to be noticed. But as an autistic girl who never talks, she goes largely ignored by her peers—despite her bold fashion choices. So when cute, popular Luis starts to pay attention to her, Ari finally feels seen.

Luis's attention soon turns to something more, and they have sex at a party—while Ari didn't say no, she definitely didn't say yes. Before she has a chance to process what happened and decide if she even has the right to be mad at Luis, the rumor mill begins churning—thanks, she's sure, to Luis's ex-girlfriend, Shawni. Boys at school now see Ari as an easy target, someone who won't say no.

Then Ari finds a mysterious note in her locker that eventually leads her to a group of students determined to expose Luis for the predator he is. To her surprise, she finds genuine friendship among the group, including her growing feelings for the very last girl she expected to fall for. But in order to take Luis down, she'll have to come to terms with the truth of what he did to her that night—and risk everything to see justice done.

 

The Do-Over by Rodrigo Vargas; Illustrated by Coni Yovaniniz | GRAPHIC NOVEL

Shy Mariana is looking for her chance to shine. She's having trouble making friends after a cross-country move to Ohio, plus, her dad refuses to let her help out at his hair salon, despite the fact that she's a social media expert!

So when she meets science whiz Zoe and creative maven Everly, and the three decide to start their own hair styling studio, she finally finds the friends—and the calling—she's been searching for. The trio's studio, True Colors, is a smash hit, and the girls are having a blast. Not to mention, Mariana loves helping her fellow middle-school clients express themselves.

But with the town Harvest Fest on the horizon and a line of customers always at the door, the friends have to scale up quickly, and they don't always agree on how. Can Mariana find the courage to speak up for what she wants? And does True Colors have what it takes to succeed in business and friendship?

 

Austral by Carlos Fonseca; Translated by Megan McDowell | ADULT FICTION

Julio is a disillusioned professor of literature, a per-petual wanderer who has spent years away from his home, teaching in the United States. He receives a posthumous summons from an old friend, the writer Aliza Abravanel, to uncover the mysteries within her final novel. Aliza had raced to finish her work as her mind deteriorated. In her man-uscript is a series of interconnected accouncs of loss, tales that set Julio hurtling on a journey to uncover their true meaning. Austral tracks Julio's trip from Aliza's home in an Argentine artists' colony to a forgotten city in Guatemala, to the Peruvian Amazon, and through Nueva Germania, the anti-semitic commune in Paraguay founded by Elisabeth Forster-Nietzsche.

 

ON SALE MAY 30

 

Spare Parts: The True Story of Four Undocumented Teenagers, One Ugly Robot, and an Impossible Dream by Joshua Davis; Adapted by Reyna Grande (Young Readers' Edition) | MIDDLE GRADE

In 2004, four undocumented Mexican teenagers arrived at the national underwater robotics championship at the University of California, Santa Barbara. No one had ever told Oscar, Cristian, Luis, or Lorenzo that they would amount to much—until two inspiring high school science teachers convinced the boys to enter the competition. Up against some of the best collegiate engineers in the country, this team of underdogs from Phoenix, Arizona, scraped together spare parts and a few small donations to astound not only the competition's judges but themselves, too.

Adapted by Reyna Grande—author of the acclaimed memoir The Distance Between Us about her experience as an undocumented child immigrant—this young readers' edition of Joshua Davis's New York Times bestseller showcases these students' ingenuity and courage in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds. Timely and empowering, Spare Parts is an accessible introduction to STEM, immigration, and the reality of the American Dream.

 

Breaking to the Beat! by Linda J. Acevedo; Illustrated by Frank Morrison | PICTURE BOOK

In the 1970s, many said the Bronx was just a pile of rubble, but for a shy kid like Manolo, it was alive with rhythm and music. He grew up with salsa dance parties at home and DJs battling on turntables on the street. Inspired by these new beats and the moves of James Brown, neighborhood boys and girls started dancing with a mix of twists, slides, and shuffles. The rhythm of the Toprock. Drop of the Six-step. Wiggle of the Worm. A new dance style called breaking was on the rise, and Manolo wanted to be a part of it.

Debut author Linda J. Acevedo was inspired to write this story from the many b-boys and b-girls whose love of dance propelled them to create an innovative and groundbreaking new form of dance. Coupled with award-winning illustrator Frank Morrison's sinuous and pulsating art, Breaking to the Beat! is an energizing ode to the Boogie Down Bronx and to Hip Hop—a movement that would forever change the course of music, art, and culture.

 

The Moonlit Vine by Elizabeth Santiago; Illustrated by McKenzie Mayle | YOUNG ADULT

Despite her name, Taína Perez doesn't know anything about her Taíno heritage, nor has she ever tried to learn. After all, how would ancient Puerto Rican history help with everything going on? There's constant trouble at school and in her neighborhood, her older brother was kicked out of the house, and with her mom at work, she's left alone to care for her little brother and aging grandmother. It's a lot for a 14-year-old to manage.

But life takes a wild turn when her abuela tells her she is a direct descendant of Anacaona, the beloved Taíno leader, warrior, and poet, who was murdered by the Spanish in 1503. Abuela also gives her an amulet and a zemi and says that it's time for her to step into her power like the women who came before her. But is that even possible? People like her hardly make it out of their circumstances, and the problems in her home and community are way bigger than Taína can manage. Or are they?

A modern tale with interstitial historical chapters, The Moonlit Vine brings readers a powerful story of the collective struggle, hope, and liberation of Puerto Rican and Taíno peoples.

Also available in Spanish.

 

We Don't Swim Here by Vincent Tirado | YOUNG ADULT

Bronwyn is only supposed to be in rural Hillwoods for a year. Her grandmother is in hospice, and her father needs to get her affairs in order. And they're all meant to make some final memories together.

Except Bronwyn is miserable. Her grandmother is dying, everyone is standoffish, and she can't even go swimming. All she hears are warnings about going in the water, despite a gorgeous lake. And a pool at the abandoned rec center. And another in the high school basement.

Anais tries her hardest to protect Bronwyn from the shadows of Hillwoods. She follows her own rituals to avoid any unnecessary attention—and if she can just get Bronwyn to stop asking questions, she can protect her too. The less Bronwyn pays attention to Hillwoods, the less Hillwoods will pay attention to Bronwyn. She doesn't get that the lore is, well, truth. History. Pain. The living aren't the only ones who seek retribution when they're wronged. But when Bronwyn does more exploring than she should, they are both in for danger they couldn't expect.

Book Review: The Worry Balloon by Monica Mancillas, Illustrated by Betty C. Tang

The Worry Balloon is written by Monica Mancillas with beautiful illustrations done by Betty C. Tang. The book follows Isla who is experiencing anxiety about her first day of school. The big “what if” questions plague her mind as the first day looms closer, but fortunately, her mom is there to help. Her mother teaches Isla a trick, or a coping mechanism, to calm her worried thoughts. She is a beacon of comfort as she validates her daughter’s concerns. At the end of the book, additional coping mechanisms are provided along with a beautifully written author’s note that goes on to explain why the book was written.

“The Worry Balloon” is the type of book that I wish was available to me as a young girl. . . Mancillas is doing a service not just for children, but for anyone who is seeking coping mechanisms for their worries or concerns.

The Worry Balloon is the type of book that I wish was available to me as a young girl. At a young age, I changed schools and this resource would have given me the skills that I needed to be brave, just like Isla. Mancillas is doing a service not just for children, but for anyone who is seeking coping mechanisms for their worries or concerns. This book is especially important for the Latinx community because mental health is a topic that is rarely talked about, in our community, and can even be even seen as taboo. This book creates mental health awareness, while opening the door for conversations to be held, in a gentle and validating manner.


MÓNICA MANCILLAS writes picture books, along with middle-grade nonfiction and fiction, that center on identity, culture, and mental health. She was born in Ensenada, Baja California, and then moved to the United States at the age of two. She is an alumna of the San Diego School of Creative and Performing Arts and has a B.A. in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley. 

MELISSA GONZALEZ (she/her) is a UCLA graduate with a major in American Literature & Culture and a minor in Chicana/o & Central American Studies. She loves boba, horror movies, and reading. You can spot her in the fiction, horror/mystery/thriller, and young adult sections of bookstores. Though she is short, she feels as tall as her TBR pile. You can find Melissa on her book Instagram: @floralchapters

April 2023 Latinx Releases

ON SALE APRIL 1

Hollow Beasts by Alisa Lynn Valdés | ADULT FICTION

After a long stint in academia, Jodi Luna leaves Boston for the wilds of New Mexico to start a new life as a game warden. Jodi is no stranger to the wilderness; her family has lived here for generations. Determined to protect her homeland, she nabs a poacher in her first week on the job.

But when he retaliates by stalking Jodi and her teenage daughter, a cat and mouse game leads Jodi to a white supremacist group deep in the mountains. She learns that new recruits are kidnapping women of color to prove their mettle to the organization's leader.

When the local sheriff refuses to assist, Jodi joins up with young deputy Ashley Romero. Together, they set out to take down a terrorist network that will test not just their skills as investigators but also their knowledge of the land and commitment to its people.

But will Jodi's fierce resolve to protect the voiceless put her loved ones in harm's way?


ON SALE APRIL 4

The Ghosts of Rancho Espanto by Adrianna Cuevas | MIDDLE GRADE

Rafa would rather live in the world of The Forgotten Age, his favorite role-playing game, than face his father's increasing restrictions and his mother's fading presence. But when Rafa and his friends decide to take the game out into the real world and steal their school cafeteria's slushie machine, his dad concocts a punishment Rafa never could've imagined—a month working on a ranch in New Mexico, far away from his friends, their game, and his mom's quesitos in Miami.

Life at Rancho Espanto isn't as bad as Rafa initially expected, mostly due to Jennie, a new friend with similarly strong snack opinions, and Marcus, the veteran barn manager who's not as gruff as he appears. But when Rafa's work at the ranch is inexplicably sabotaged by a man who may not be what he seems, Rafa and Jennie explore what's behind the strange events at Rancho Espanto—and discover that the greatest mystery may have been with Rafa all along.

This Is Not Miami by Fernanda Melchor | Translated by Sophie Hughes | SHORT STORIES

Set in and around the Mexican city of Veracruz, This Is Not Miami delivers a series of devastating stories—spiraling from real events—that bleed together reportage and the author's rich and rigorous imagination. These narrative nonfiction pieces probe deeply into the motivations of murderers and misfits, into their desires and circumstances, forcing us to understand them—and even empathize—despite our wish to simply label them monsters. As in her hugely acclaimed novels Hurricane Season and Paradais, Fernanda Melchor's masterful stories show how the violent and shocking aberrations that make the headlines are only the surface ruptures of a society on the brink of chaos.

Ana María and the Fox by Liana De La Rosa | ADULT FICTION

Ana María Luna Valdés has strived to be the perfect daughter, the perfect niece, and the perfect representative of the powerful Luna family. So when Ana María is secretly sent to London with her sisters to seek refuge from the French occupation of Mexico, she experiences her first taste of freedom far from the judgmental eyes of her domineering father. If only she could ignore the piercing looks she receives across ballroom floors from the austere Mr. Fox.

Gideon Fox elevated himself from the London gutters by chasing his burning desire for more: more opportunities, more choices. For everyone. Now, as a member of Parliament, Gideon is on the cusp of securing the votes he needs to put forth a measure to abolish the Atlantic slave trade once and for all—a cause that is close to his heart as the grandson of a formerly enslaved woman. The charmingly vexing Ana María is a distraction he must ignore.

But when Ana María finds herself in the crosshairs of a nefarious nobleman with his own political agenda, Gideon knows he must offer his hand as protection . . . but will this Mexican heiress win his heart as well?

The Apprentice Tourist by Mário de Andrade |Translated by Flora Thomson-Deveaux | ADULT NONFICTION

A Brazilian masterpiece, now in English for the first time: a playfully profound chronicle of an urban sophisticate's misadventures in the Amazon.

"My life's done a somersault," wrote Mário de Andrade in a letter, on the verge of taking a leap. After years of dreaming about Amazonia, and almost fifty years before Bruce Chatwin ventured into one of the most remote regions of South America in In Patagonia, Andrade, the queer mixed-race "pope" of Brazilian modernism and author of the epic novel Macunaíma, finally embarks on a three-month steamboat voyage up the great river and into one of the most dangerous and breathtakingly beautiful corners of the world. Rife with shrewd observations and sparkling wit, and featuring more than a dozen photographs, The Apprentice Tourist not only offers an awed and awe-inspiring fish-out-of-water account of the Indigenous peoples and now-endangered landscapes of Brazil that he encounters (and, comically, sometimes fails to reach), but also traces his internal metamorphosis: The trip prompts him to rethink his ingrained Eurocentrism, challenges his received narratives about the Amazon, and alters the way he understands his motherland and the vast diversity of cultures found within it.

The People Who Report More Stress by Alejandro Varela | SHORT STORIES

A collection of humorous, sexy, and highly neurotic tales about parenting, long-term relationships, systemic and interpersonal racism, and class conflict from the author of The Town of Babylon, The People Who Report More Stress deftly and poignantly expresses the frustration of knowing the problems and solutions to our society's inequities but being unable to do anything about them.


ON SALE APRIL 11

The Making of Yolanda la Bruja by Lorraine Avila | YOUNG ADULT

Yolanda Alvarez is having a good year. She's starting to feel at home at Julia De Burgos High, her school in the Bronx. She has her best friend Victory, and maybe something with José, a senior boy she's getting to know. She's confident her initiation into her family's bruja tradition will happen soon.

But then a white boy, the son of a politician, appears at Julia De Burgos High, and his vibes are off. And Yolanda's initiation begins with a series of troubling visions of the violence this boy threatens. How can Yolanda protect her community, in a world that doesn't listen? Only with the wisdom and love of her family, friends, and community—and the Brujas Diosas, her ancestors and guides.

The Making of Yolanda La Bruja is the book this country, struggling with the plague of gun violence, so desperately needs, but which few could write. Here Lorraine Avila brings a story born from the intersection of race, justice, education, and spirituality that will capture readers everywhere.

Plátanos Are Love by Alyssa Reynoso-Morris | Illustrated by Mariyah Rahman | PICTURE BOOK

A delicious picture book about the ways plantains shape Latinx culture, community, and family, told through a young girl's experiences in the kitchen with her abuela.

With every pop of the tostones, mash of the mangú, and sizzle of the maduros, a little girl learns that plátanos are her history, they are her culture, and—most importantly—they are love.

Viva Lola Espinoza by Ella Cerón | YOUNG ADULT

Lola Espinoza is cursed in love. Well, maybe not actually cursed—magic isn't real, is it? When Lola goes to spend the summer with her grandmother in Mexico City and meets handsome, flirtatious Rio, she discovers the unbelievable truth: Magic is very real, and what she'd always written off as bad luck is actually, truly . . . a curse. If Lola ever wants to fall in love without suffering the consequences, she'll have to break the curse. She finds an unlikely curse-breaking companion in Javi, a seemingly stoic boy she meets while working in her cousin's restaurant. Javi is willing to help Lola look into this family curse of hers, and Lola needs all the help she can get. Over the course of one summer—filled with food, family, and two very different boys—Lola explores Mexico City while learning about herself, her heritage, and the magic around us all.

Our Roof Is Blue by Sara E. Echenique | Illustrated by Ashley Vargas | PICTURE BOOK

This heartfelt story of resilience follows two siblings as they work to recover and rebuild after Hurricane Maria destroys their home in Puerto Rico.

Before an intense hurricane hits their home in Puerto Rico, Antonio told his sister vibrant stories each night. During the storm, they huddled with their parents in a closet and hear the storm blow the roof right off their home. After the storm, their family uses a temporary blue tarp for a roof, and Antonio stops speaking. Gradually the siblings imagine their blue roof playfully—as the ocean above them or a parachute helping them fall from the sky. As the narrator helps her little brother feel safe once more—and after the family and community build a new roof—the little boy begins to speak again.


ON SALE APRIL 18

Wings in the Wild by Margarita Engle | YOUNG ADULT

This gorgeously romantic contemporary novel-in-verse from award-winning author Margarita Engle tells the inspiring love story of two teens fighting for climate action and human rights.

Winged beings are meant to be free. And so are artists, but the Cuban government has criminalized any art that doesn't meet their approval. Soleida and her parents protest this injustice with their secret sculpture garden of chained birds. Then a hurricane exposes the illegal art, and her parents are arrested.

Soleida escapes to Central America alone, joining the thousands of Cuban refugees stranded in Costa Rica while seeking asylum elsewhere. There she meets Dariel, a Cuban American boy whose enigmatic music enchants birds and animals—and Soleida.

Together they work to protect the environment and bring attention to the imprisoned artists in Cuba. Soon they discover that love isn't about falling—it's about soaring together to new heights. But wings can be fragile, and Soleida and Dariel come from different worlds. They are fighting for a better future—and the chance to be together.

Manolo & the Unicorn by Jackie Azúa Kramer & Jonah Kramer | Illustrated by Zach Manbeck | PICTURE BOOK

A story about seeing and believing wholeheartedly in the extraordinary—unicorns and oneself

To Manolo the world is a magical place—a place where he searches for the most magical creature of all: a unicorn. Manolo loves unicorns. When the Wild Animal Parade is announced at school, and Manolo declares that he will come as his favorite animal, his classmates say there is no such thing as unicorns, making the world feel ordinary. That is, until Manolo meets a real unicorn—wild and graceful—and discovers that the world is truly extraordinary.

Felice and the Wailing Woman by Diana López | MIDDLE GRADE

When Felice learns that she's the daughter of La Llorona, she catches a ride to the magical town of Tres Leches, where her mother is said to be haunting the river. Growing up with her uncle Clem in Corpus Christi, Felice knew that she had been rescued from drowning—it's where her intense fear of water comes from—but she had no idea her mother remained trapped between worlds, looking for her. Guided by the magical town's eccentric mayor, Felice vows to help her mother make peace with the events that turned her into the most famous monstruo of US-Mexico border lore. Along the way, she meets the children of other monstruos, like La Lechuza and the Dancing Devil, and together they free Tres Leches from magical and metaphorical curses that have haunted its people for generations.

Tumble by Celia C. Pérez | MIDDLE GRADE

NOW IN PAPERBACK

Twelve-year-old Adela "Addie" Ramírez has a big decision to make when her stepfather proposes adoption. Addie loves Alex, the only father figure she's ever known, but with a new half brother due in a few months and a big school theater performance on her mind, everything suddenly feels like it's moving too fast. She has a million questions, and the first is about the young man in the photo she found hidden away in her mother's things.

Addie's sleuthing takes her to a New Mexico ranch, and her world expands to include the legendary Bravos: Rosie and Pancho, her paternal grandparents and former professional wrestlers; Eva and Maggie, her older identical twin cousins who love to spar in and out of the ring; Uncle Mateo, whose lucha couture and advice are unmatched; and Manny, her biological father, who's in the midst of a career comeback. As luchadores, the Bravos's legacy is strong. But being part of a family is so much harder—it's about showing up, taking off your mask, and working through challenges together.

The Haunting of Alejandra by V. Castro | ADULT FICTION

Alejandra no longer knows who she is. To her husband, she is a wife, and to her children, a mother. To her own adoptive mother, she is a daughter. But they cannot see who Alejandra has become: a woman struggling with a darkness that threatens to consume her.

Nor can they see what Alejandra sees. In times of despair, a ghostly vision appears to her, the apparition of a crying woman in a ragged white gown.

When Alejandra visits a therapist, she begins exploring her family's history, starting with the biological mother she never knew. As she goes deeper into the lives of the women in her family, she learns that heartbreak and tragedy are not the only things she has in common with her ancestors.

Because the crying woman was with them, too. She is La Llorona, the vengeful and murderous mother of Mexican legend. And she will not leave until Alejandra follows her mother, her grandmother, and all the women who came before her into the darkness.

But Alejandra has inherited more than just pain. She has inherited the strength and the courage of her foremothers—and she will have to summon everything they have given her to banish La Llorona forever.

The Fitful Sleep of Immigrants by Orlando Ortega-Medina | ADULT FICTION

Attorney Marc Mendes, the estranged son of a prominent rabbi and a burned-out lawyer with addiction issues, plots his exit from the big city to a more peaceful life in idyllic Napa Valley. But before realizing his dream, the US government summons his Salvadoran life partner Isaac Perez to immigration court, threatening him with deportation.

As Marc battles to save Isaac, his world is further upended by a dark and alluring client who aims to tempt him away from his messy life. Torn between his commitment to Isaac and the pain-numbing escapism offered by his client, Marc is forced to choose between the lesser of two evils while confronting his twin demons of past addiction and guilt over the death of his first lover.


ON SALE APRIL 25

Doodles from the Boogie Down by Stephanie Rodriguez | MIDDLE GRADE

A young Dominican girl navigates middle school, her strict mother, shifting friendships, and her dream of being an artist in this debut coming-of-age graphic novel inspired by the author's tween years.

Eighth grade in New York City means one thing: It's time to start applying to high schools! While her friends are looking at school catalogs and studying for entrance exams, Steph is doodling in her notebook and waiting for art class to begin. When her art teacher tells her about LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, Steph desperately wants to apply. But she's in the Bronx, and LaGuardia is a public school in Manhattan—which her mom would not approve of. Steph comes up with a plan that includes lying to her mom, friends, and teachers. Keeping secrets isn't easy, and Steph must decide how far she'll go to get what she wants.

Borderless by Jennifer de Leon | YOUNG ADULT

Caught in the crosshairs of gang violence, a teen girl and her mother set off on a perilous journey from Guatemala City to the US border in this heart-wrenching young adult novel from the author of Don't Ask Me Where I'm From.

For seventeen-year-old Maya, trashion is her passion, and her talent for making clothing out of unusual objects landed her a scholarship to Guatemala City's most prestigious art school and a finalist spot in the school's fashion show. Mamá is her biggest supporter, taking on extra jobs to pay for what the scholarship doesn't cover, and she might be even more excited than Maya about what the fashion show could do for her future career.

So when Mamá doesn't come to the show, Maya doesn't know what to think. But the truth is worse than she could have imagined. The gang threats in their neighborhood have walked in their front door—with a boy Maya considered a friend, or maybe more, among them. After barely making their escape, Maya and her mom have no choice but to continue their desperate flight all the way through Guatemala and Mexico in hopes of crossing the US border.

Interview with Margo Candela author of The Neapolitan Sisters

Latinx In Publishing had the opportunity to ask Margo Candela a few questions about The Neapolitan Sisters: A Novel of Heritage and Home.

Latinx In Publishing (LxP): Where did the inspiration for the novel come from?

Margo Candela (MC): Writers are like memory magpies, constantly collecting random bits and pieces of life that might not make sense in the moment, but are too interesting to ignore or forget. When the idea for The Neapolitan Sisters came to me, it already had its beginning, middle and end. Although it was fiction, the story and characters were familiar to me in a way that I still have a hard time explaining. While the inspiration for The Neapolitan Sisters came both from my imagination and from being observant, what really set this novel apart from my previous work was my intention for writing it. I wanted to challenge myself as a writer, but I also wanted to allow my characters to be flawed, difficult and complicated without excuse or apology. 

LxP: One of the primary themes within the story are the types of relationships that exist within families, but also outside of them. Can you talk a bit about the importance for you to highlight that?

MC: It's important, sometimes more so, for my characters to have an identity that’s not based on being a son or daughter, sister or brother, husband or wife, mother or father. How they function separately from those roles is one I like to explore because a lot of times, Latina and Latino characters don’t get to move away from that primary identifier of who and what they are. When they're navigating life in a larger social circle and away from family, they find themselves relating to friends, partners, workmates with the same skill set that either serves them or keeps them from moving beyond dysfunctional dynamics.

LxP: The sisters dealt with a lot of trauma that they all dealt with in their own various ways. Can you speak on your writing process, how you decided on each of the sisters' journeys, and how they would complement each other?

MC: Having three main characters who told their story in first person was a natural way to delve into how Dulcina, Claudia and Maritza would each be affected individually by their shared trauma. Even though they spent their childhood and teens together, they don't interpret that period of their lives in the same way, but they are strongly bonded because of it. Knowing this about them meant I had to let each sister go where she needed to go, even if it made me uncomfortable or took me by surprise. Once I allowed myself to just write what felt right for each sister, I was able to give all three of them added depth and humanity by accepting their flaws as part of who they needed to be. I really love these sisters and it was such a joy, even if sometimes a painful one, to get to know them and bring them to life.

LxP: What can readers expect to gain from reading The Neapolitan Sisters?

MC: The Neapolitan Sisters is about finding compassion and love not only for others, but for oneself. Dulcina, Claudia and Maritza’s acceptance of who they are to each other is the greatest gift they can both give and receive. Compassion, love, and acceptance are essential components to intimate relationships and the Bernal sisters are, to different degrees, able to realize this by the end of the novel. Once they do, they’re able to move forward with their lives, and also be in each other’s lives. This doesn’t always happen in real life, but it can in books which is why I’m so grateful that The Neapolitan Sisters was published after so many years of waiting for me to be brave enough to write it as best as I could.

ACCESS THE BOOK CLUB KIT HERE.


Margo Candela was born and raised in Los Angeles and began her writing career when she joined Glendale Community College’s student newspaper. She transferred to San Francisco State University as a journalism major, and upon graduation began writing for websites and magazines before writing her first two novels, Underneath It All and Life Over Easy. She returned to Los Angeles to raise her son and wrote More Than This and Good-bye to All That. The Neapolitan Sisters is her fifth novel and her first after a decade-long hiatus from writing. She now lives in San Francisco. Learn more at MargoCandela.com.