April's Anticipated Reads

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APRIL’S ANTICIPATED READS

We’re giving you our picks for the most anticipated reads for April. Be sure to check our blog for the full list of April Releases and let us know which books you’re most excited for!

 

my broken language: A Memoir | Adult nonfiction

by Quiara Alegría Hudes (Penguin Random House / One World). 4/6/2021.

Quiara Alegría Hudes was the sharp-eyed girl on the stairs while her family danced in her grandmother’s tight North Philly kitchen. She was awed by her aunts and uncles and cousins, but haunted by the secrets of the family and the unspoken, untold stories of the barrio—even as she tried to find her own voice in the sea of language around her, written and spoken, English and Spanish, bodies and books, Western art and sacred altars. Her family became her private pantheon, a gathering circle of powerful orisha-like women with tragic real-world wounds, and she vowed to tell their stories—but first she’d have to get off the stairs and join the dance. She’d have to find her language.

Weaving together Hudes’s love of books with the stories of her family, the lessons of North Philly with those of Yale, this is an inspired exploration of home, memory, and belonging—narrated by an obsessed girl who fought to become an artist so she could capture the world she loved in all its wild and delicate beauty.

 

the beautiful ones | aDULT FANTASY, HORROR

by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Macmillan/TOR). 4/27/2021.

They are the Beautiful Ones, Loisail’s most notable socialites, and this spring is Nina’s chance to join their ranks, courtesy of her well-connected cousin and his calculating wife. But the Grand Season has just begun, and already Nina’s debut has gone disastrously awry. She has always struggled to control her telekinesis―neighbors call her the Witch of Oldhouse―and the haphazard manifestations of her powers make her the subject of malicious gossip.

When entertainer Hector Auvray arrives to town, Nina is dazzled. A telekinetic like her, he has traveled the world performing his talents for admiring audiences. He sees Nina not as a witch, but ripe with potential to master her power under his tutelage. With Hector’s help, Nina’s talent blossoms, as does her love for him.

But great romances are for fairytales, and Hector is hiding a truth from Nina ― and himself―that threatens to end their courtship before it truly begins.

The Beautiful Ones is a charming tale of love and betrayal, and the struggle between conformity and passion, set in a world where scandal is a razor-sharp weapon.

 

somewhere between bitter and sweet | yA Contemporary

by Laekan Zea Kemp (Hachette/Little, Brown Books For Young Readers). 4/6/2021.

Penelope Prado has always dreamed of opening her own pastelería next to her father's restaurant, Nacho's Tacos. But her mom and dad have different plans—leaving Pen to choose between disappointing her traditional Mexican American parents or following her own path. When she confesses a secret she's been keeping, her world is sent into a tailspin. But then she meets a cute new hire at Nacho's who sees through her hard exterior and asks the questions she's been too afraid to ask herself.

Xander Amaro has been searching for home since he was a little boy. For him, a job at Nacho's is an opportunity for just that—a chance at a normal life, to settle in at his abuelo's, and to find the father who left him behind. But when both the restaurant and Xander's immigrant status are threatened, he will do whatever it takes to protect his newfound family and himself.

Together, Pen and Xander must navigate first love and discovering where they belong in order to save the place they all call home.

This stunning and poignant novel from debut author Laekan Zea Kemp explores identity, found families and the power of food, all nestled within a courageous and intensely loyal Chicanx community.

 

merci suÁrez can’t dance | Middle grade contemporary

by Meg Medina (Candlewick). 4/6/2021.

Seventh grade is going to be a real trial for Merci Suárez. For science she’s got no-nonsense Mr. Ellis, who expects her to be a smart as her brother, Roli. She’s been assigned to co-manage the tiny school store with Wilson Bellevue, a boy she barely knows, but whom she might actually like. And she’s tangling again with classmate Edna Santos, who is bossier and more obnoxious than ever now that she is in charge of the annual Heart Ball.

One thing is for sure, though: Merci Suárez can’t dance—not at the Heart Ball or anywhere else. Dancing makes her almost as queasy as love does, especially now that Tía Inés, her merengue-teaching aunt, has a new man in her life. Unfortunately, Merci can’t seem to avoid love or dance for very long. She used to talk about everything with her grandfather, Lolo, but with his Alzheimer’s getting worse each day, whom can she trust to help her make sense of all the new things happening in her life? The Suárez family is back in a touching, funny story about growing up and discovering love’s many forms, including how we learn to love and believe in ourselves.

 

we move together | pICTURE BOOK

by Kelly Fritsch & Anne McGuire; illustrated by Eduardo Trejos (AK Press)

A bold and colorful exploration of all the ways that people navigate through the spaces around them and a celebration of the relationships we build along the way. We Move Together follows a mixed-ability group of kids as they creatively negotiate everyday barriers and find joy and connection in disability culture and community. A perfect tool for families, schools, and libraries to facilitate conversations about disability, accessibility, social justice and community building. Includes a kid-friendly glossary (for ages 6–9).

 

April 2021 Latinx Releases

APRIL 2021 LATINX RELEASES

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ON-SALE MARCH 26TH, 2021

 

WHITE SPACE | Adult Nonfiction

by Jennifer De Leon (University of Massachusetts Press)

Sometime in her twenties, Jennifer De Leon asked herself, “What would you do if you just gave yourself permission?” While her parents had fled Guatemala over three decades earlier when the country was in the grips of genocide and civil war, she hadn’t been back since she was a child. She gave herself permission to return—to relearn the Spanish that she had forgotten, unpack her family’s history, and begin to make her own way.

Alternately honest, funny, and visceral, this powerful collection follows De Leon as she comes of age as a Guatemalan-American woman and learns to navigate the space between two worlds. Never rich or white enough for her posh college, she finds herself equally adrift in her first weeks in her parents’ home country. During the years to follow, she would return to Guatemala again and again, meet ex-guerrillera and genocide survivors, get married in the old cobblestoned capital of Antigua, and teach her newborn son about his roots.

 

ON-SALE MARCH 30TH, 2021

 

EAT THE MOUTH THAT FEEDS YOU | Fiction

by Carribean Fragoza (City Lights Publishers)

In visceral, embodied prose, Fragoza's imperfect characters are drawn with a sympathetic tenderness as they struggle against circumstances and conditions designed to defeat them. A young woman returns home from college, only to pick up exactly where she left off: a smart girl in a rundown town with no future. A mother reflects on the pain and pleasures of being inexorably consumed by her small daughter, whose penchant for ingesting grandma's letters has extended to taking bites of her actual flesh. A brother and sister watch anxiously as their distraught mother takes an ax to their old furniture, and then to the backyard fence, until finally she attacks the family’s beloved lime tree.

Victories are excavated from the rubble of personal hardship, and women's wisdom is brutally forged from the violence of history that continues to unfold on both sides of the US-Mexico border.

 

ON-SALE APRIL 1ST, 2021

 

TO CARNIVAL!: A CELEBRATION IN ST. LUCIA | Picture Book

by Baptiste Paul; Illustrated by Jana Glatt (Barefoot Books)

The sights, sounds and tastes of vibrant Saint Lucia come to life in this cumulative #OwnVoices tale of a girl’s journey to Carnival. When a series of unexpected delays disrupts her journey to the big parade, Melba must adjust both her expectations and her route to the festivities. Who will she meet and what will she learn along the way?

 

ON-SALE APRIL 6TH, 2021

 

ANITA AND THE DRAGONS | Picture Book

by Hannah Carmona; illustrated by Anna Cunha (Lerner/Lantana Publishing)

Anita watches the dragons high above her as she hops from one cement roof to another in her village in the Dominican Republic. But being the valiant princesa she is, she never lets them scare her. Then one day, Anita must face her fears and begin life in a new country. Will she be brave enough to enter the belly of the beast and take flight to new adventures?

 

FEARLESS | Middle Grade

by Mandy Gonzalez (S&S/Aladdin)

The Ethel Merman Theater is cursed. No one is sure how or why, but the evidence speaks for itself. Show after show has flopped and the theater is about to close. Enter twelve-year-old Monica Garcia, who has been cast to star in a Broadway musical revival of The Goonies, the theater’s last chance to produce a hit before it shutters its doors for good.

The kids in the cast each have their own reasons for wanting to make the show a success, and all eyes in the theater world are on them. Will this show finally break the curse of the Ethel? The kids aren’t quite sure if the curse is even real, but when their first performance doesn’t quite go as planned, it certainly feels that way.

Then they realize the ghost light—the light that is always kept on at every theater in order to appease the ghosts—wasn’t lit! When the kids rush to flick the switch back on, they find themselves locked in the theater—but that’s the least of their problems when the ghost of the Ethel makes her debut appearance!

Can the cast overcome their fears and reverse the ghost’s curse before opening night so they can save the show—and their dreams?

 

LIFE’S TOO SHORT | Adult Fiction

by Abby Jimenez (Hachette/Grand Central Publishing)

When Vanessa Price quit her job to pursue her dream of traveling the globe, she wasn't expecting to gain millions of YouTube followers who shared her joy of seizing every moment. For her, living each day to its fullest isn't just a motto. Her mother and sister never saw the age of 30, and Vanessa doesn't want to take anything for granted. But after her half sister suddenly leaves Vanessa in custody of her baby daughter, life goes from "daily adventure" to "next-level bad" (now with bonus baby vomit in hair). The last person Vanessa expects to show up offering help is the hot lawyer next door, Adrian Copeland. After all, she barely knows him. No one warned her that he was the Secret Baby Tamer or that she'd be spending a whole lot of time with him and his geriatric Chihuahua. Now she's feeling things she's vowed not to feel. Because the only thing worse than falling for Adrian is finding a little hope for a future she may never see.

 

MERCI SUÁREZ CAN’T DANCE | Middle Grade

by Meg Medina (Candlewick)

Seventh grade is going to be a real trial for Merci Suárez. For science she’s got no-nonsense Mr. Ellis, who expects her to be a smart as her brother, Roli. She’s been assigned to co-manage the tiny school store with Wilson Bellevue, a boy she barely knows, but whom she might actually like. And she’s tangling again with classmate Edna Santos, who is bossier and more obnoxious than ever now that she is in charge of the annual Heart Ball.

One thing is for sure, though: Merci Suárez can’t dance—not at the Heart Ball or anywhere else. Dancing makes her almost as queasy as love does, especially now that Tía Inés, her merengue-teaching aunt, has a new man in her life. Unfortunately, Merci can’t seem to avoid love or dance for very long. She used to talk about everything with her grandfather, Lolo, but with his Alzheimer’s getting worse each day, whom can she trust to help her make sense of all the new things happening in her life? The Suárez family is back in a touching, funny story about growing up and discovering love’s many forms, including how we learn to love and believe in ourselves.

 

MY BROKEN LANGUAGE: A MEMOIR |Adult Nonfiction

by Quiara Alegría Hudes (Penguin Random House/One World)

Quiara Alegría Hudes was the sharp-eyed girl on the stairs while her family danced in her grandmother’s tight North Philly kitchen. She was awed by her aunts and uncles and cousins, but haunted by the secrets of the family and the unspoken, untold stories of the barrio—even as she tried to find her own voice in the sea of language around her, written and spoken, English and Spanish, bodies and books, Western art and sacred altars. Her family became her private pantheon, a gathering circle of powerful orisha-like women with tragic real-world wounds, and she vowed to tell their stories—but first she’d have to get off the stairs and join the dance. She’d have to find her language.
 
Weaving together Hudes’s love of books with the stories of her family, the lessons of North Philly with those of Yale, this is an inspired exploration of home, memory, and belonging—narrated by an obsessed girl who fought to become an artist so she could capture the world she loved in all its wild and delicate beauty.

 

SOMEWHERE BETWEEN BITTER AND SWEET |YA Contemporary

by Laekan Zea Kemp (Hachette/Little, Brown And Company)

Penelope Prado has always dreamed of opening her own pastelería next to her father's restaurant, Nacho's Tacos. But her mom and dad have different plans—leaving Pen to choose between disappointing her traditional Mexican American parents or following her own path. When she confesses a secret she's been keeping, her world is sent into a tailspin. But then she meets a cute new hire at Nacho's who sees through her hard exterior and asks the questions she's been too afraid to ask herself.

Xander Amaro has been searching for home since he was a little boy. For him, a job at Nacho's is an opportunity for just that—a chance at a normal life, to settle in at his abuelo's, and to find the father who left him behind. But when both the restaurant and Xander's immigrant status are threatened, he will do whatever it takes to protect his newfound family and himself.

Together, Pen and Xander must navigate first love and discovering where they belong in order to save the place they all call home.

This stunning and poignant novel from debut author Laekan Zea Kemp explores identity, found families and the power of food, all nestled within a courageous and intensely loyal Chicanx community.

 

WE MOVE TOGETHER |Picture Book

by Kelly Fritsch & Anne McGuire; illustrated by Eduardo Trejos (AK Press)

A bold and colorful exploration of all the ways that people navigate through the spaces around them and a celebration of the relationships we build along the way. We Move Together follows a mixed-ability group of kids as they creatively negotiate everyday barriers and find joy and connection in disability culture and community. A perfect tool for families, schools, and libraries to facilitate conversations about disability, accessibility, social justice and community building. Includes a kid-friendly glossary (for ages 6–9)

 

YOUR MAMA |Picture Book

by NoNieqa Ramos; illustrated by Jacqueline Alcántara (HMH/Versify)

A sweet twist on the age-old “yo mama” joke, celebrating fierce moms everywhere with playful lyricism and gorgeous illustrations. Perfect for Mother’s Day.

Yo’ mama so sweet, she could be a bakery. She dresses so fine, she could have a clothing line. And, even when you mess up, she’s so forgiving, she lets you keep on living. Heartwarming and richly imagined, Your Mama twists an old joke into a point of pride that honors the love, hard work, and dedication of mamas everywhere.

 

OCULTA: NOCTURNA #2 | YA Fantasy

by Maya Motayne (Balzer + Bray/Harperteen)

After joining forces to save Castallan from an ancient magical evil, Alfie and Finn haven’t seen each other in months. Alfie is finally stepping up to his role as heir and preparing for an International Peace Summit, while Finn is traveling and reveling in her newfound freedom from Ignacio.

That is, until she’s unexpectedly installed as the new leader of one of Castallan’s powerful crime syndicates. 

Just when Finn finds herself back in San Cristobal, Alfie’s plans are also derailed. The mysterious organization responsible for his brother’s murder has resurfaced—and their newest target is the summit. And when these events converge, Finn and Alfie are once again forced to work together to follow the assassins’ trail and preserve Castallan’s hopes for peace with Englass. 

But will they be able to stop these sinister foes before a new war threatens their kingdom?

 

ON-SALE APRIL 13TH, 2021

 

48 GRASSHOPPER ESTATES | Picture Book

by Sara de Wall; illustrated by Erika Medina (Annick Press)

A little girl uses imagination and inventiveness to spread friendship through her community. But will she find a friend of her own?

Whether it’s a supersonic sandwich maker or a twelve-tailed dragon, Sicily Bridges can make almost anything from materials she finds around her apartment complex. But when it comes to making friends, Sicily has yet to find the perfect fit. With a diverse cast of characters brought to life by illustrator Erika Medina, Sara de Waal’s whimsical debut emphasizes the power of imagination and finding companionship where you least expect it.

 

ALIEN NATION | Picture Book

by Sandro Bassi (Levine Querido)

A wordless wonder of a picture book, reminiscent of David Wiesner and Chris Van Allsburg. An unforgettable subway ride in an alien world filled with truths of our own.

 

CECE RIOS AND THE DESERT OF SOULS | Middle Grade Fantasy

by Kaela Rivera (HarperCollins)

Living in the remote town of Tierra del Sol is dangerous, especially in the criatura months, when powerful spirits roam the desert and threaten humankind. But Cecelia Rios has always believed there was more to the criaturas, much to her family’s disapproval. After all, only brujas—humans who capture and control criaturas—consort with the spirits, and brujeria is a terrible crime.

When her older sister, Juana, is kidnapped by El Sombrerón, a powerful dark criatura, Cece is determined to bring Juana back. To get into Devil’s Alley, though, she’ll have to become a bruja herself—while hiding her quest from her parents, her town, and the other brujas. Thankfully, the legendary criatura Coyote has a soft spot for humans and agrees to help her on her journey.

With him at her side, Cece sets out to reunite her family—and maybe even change what it means to be a bruja along the way.

 

THE MARY SHELLEY CLUB | Young Adult Thriller

by Goldy Moldavsky (Henry Holt & Company)

When it comes to horror movies, the rules are clear:

x Avoid abandoned buildings, warehouses, and cabins at all times.
x Stay together: don't split up, not even just to "check something out."
x If there's a murderer on the loose, do not make out with anyone.

If only surviving in real life were this easy...

New girl Rachel Chavez turns to horror movies for comfort, preferring stabby serial killers and homicidal dolls to the bored rich kids of Manhattan Prep...and to certain memories she'd preferred to keep buried.

Then Rachel is recruited by the Mary Shelley Club, a mysterious society of students who orchestrate Fear Tests, elaborate pranks inspired by urban legends and movie tropes. At first, Rachel embraces the power that comes with reckless pranking. But as the Fear Tests escalate, the competition turns deadly, and it's clear Rachel is playing a game she can't afford to lose.

 

TAG TEAM: EL TORO AND FRIENDS | Picture Book

by Raúl the Third; illustrated by Raúl the Third (Versify)

After last night's match, the stadium is a mess! There is so much work to be done and Mexican wrestling star El Toro feels overwhelmed. Enter . . . La Oink Oink!

With the collaborative spirit they have in the ring, El Toro and La Oink Oink tackle the cleaning up together. La Oink Oink sweeps and El Toro picks up the trash. La Oink Oink washes the dishes, and El Toro dries them. Together, an insurmountable mountain of chores becomes a series of fun tasks for these two wrestling friends!

With unique and detailed illustrations, and easy Spanish and English vocabulary words, sports fans and comic book fans alike will fall in love with El Toro, La Oink Oink, and their tag-team adventures in this fun early reader.

 

TRAINING DAY: EL TORO AND FRIENDS | Picture Book

by Raúl the Third; illustrated by Raúl the Third (Versify)

Little Lobo introduced readers to his wrestling hero El Toro in Vamos! Let’s go to the Market!. Now El Toro is off on his own adventures in this early reader series!

Task #1: Getting out of bed.

Usually that’s not so hard, but being the champion luchador isn’t easy. Today, El Toro is feeling uninspired. But his coach, Kooky Dooky, knows that practice makes better and it’s important for El Toro to stay in shape and keep training!

These eye-popping illustrations will appeal to comic book fans and encourage visual literacy, with an easy-to-follow mix of Spanish and English vocabulary words.

Readers will cheer as El Toro’s spirits are lifted with a little help from his community and he trains hard to win his next big wrestling match against The Wall!

 

WE LAUGH ALIKE/ JUNTOS NOS REÍMOS | Picture Book

by Carmen T. Bernier-Grand; illustrated by Alyssa Bermudez (Charlesbridge)

A brand new barrier-breaking and friendship-affirming bilingual picture book from award-winning author Carmen T. Bernier-Grand (Diego: Bigger than Life). Three kids are playing at the park when three more arrive. The groups can't understand each other because one trio speaks only English and the other only Spanish. But they can express similar thoughts in their own languages. Aquí interactúan el inglés y el español. Can they find a way to play? Of course they can! By watching each other, both groups learn that they are more alike than different and end up discovering new words and making new friends in this adventure propelled by clever integrated Spanish dialogue.

 

ON-SALE APRIL 15TH, 2021

 

MIGRANT PSALMS: POEMS | Adult Poetry

by Darrel Alejandro Holnes (Northwestern University Press)

Migrant Psalms prays for a way to make sense of immigration to the United States—now that we realize the American Dream was always an impossible one. Both reverent and daring, this verse interrogates religion, race, class, family, and sexuality. Written as a call to action, the collection pulls together prayer, popular culture, and technology to tell a twenty-first-century migrant story.

Migrant Psalms gives us a rare look inside a Panamanian experience of migration, describing the harsh realities of mothers, children, and teens who entered the United States—or tried to do so. Holnes’s poems find the universal through specificity; their exploration of expatriation, assimilation, and naturalization transcends the author’s personal experience to speak to what it means to be “other” anywhere.

The collection begins with “Kyrie,” a coming-to-America chronicle that spans three years in Texas, modeled after the liturgical Christian prayer Kyrie Eleison (Lord, have mercy). Other poems experiment with macaronic language and form to parallel shifts in the speaker’s status from immigrant to citizen, ending with “The 21st Century Poem,” which probes what’s “real” in today’s New York City. Through the speaker’s quest to become an American, this collection asks: Who are we becoming as individuals, as a society, as a nation, as a world? And is faith enough to enact change? Or is it just the first step?

 

ON-SALE APRIL 20th, 2021

 

CARTAS DE CUBA (LETTERS FROM CUBA SPANISH VERSION) | Middle Grade Historical

by Ruth Behar (Penguin Random House/Vintage Español)

La situación se está poniendo terrible para los judíos en Polonia en vísperas de la Segunda Guerra Mundial. El padre de Esther ha huido a Cuba y ella es la primera en seguir sus pasos y reencontrarse con él en la isla. Vivir separada de su querida hermana es desgarrador, por lo que Esther promete escribirle cartas contándole todo lo que le suceda hasta el día en que se vuelvan a reunir. Y lo hace, manteniendo un registro tanto de lo bueno – la bondad del pueblo cubano y su descubrimiento de un valioso talento oculto – como de lo malo: el hecho de que las garras del nazismo se han arraigado incluso en Cuba. Las evocadoras cartas de Esther están llenas de su aprecio por la vida y revelan a una niña ingeniosa y decidida, con una habilidad única para unir a las personas, mientras se esfuerza por sacar al resto de su familia de Polonia antes de que sea demasiado tarde.

Basada en la historia familiar de Ruth Behar, esta impresionante historia celebra la resiliencia del espíritu humano en los tiempos más desafiantes.

English Description:

The situation is getting dire for Jews in Poland on the eve of World War II. Esther's father has fled to Cuba, and she is the first one to join him. It's heartbreaking to be separated from her beloved sister, so Esther promises to write down everything that happens until they're reunited. And she does, recording both the good—the kindness of the Cuban people and her discovery of a valuable hidden talent—and the bad: the fact that Nazism has found a foothold even in Cuba. Esther's evocative letters are full of her appreciation for life and reveal a resourceful, determined girl with a rare ability to bring people together, all the while striving to get the rest of their family out of Poland before it's too late.

Based on Ruth Behar's family history, this compelling story celebrates the resilience of the human spirit in the most challenging times.

 

NO SOMOS DE AQUÍ (WE ARE NOT FROM HERE SPANISH VERSION) | Young Adult

by Jenny Torres Sanchez (Penguin Random House/Vintage Español)

Pulga lleva sus sueños consigo. Chico carga el dolor de perder a su madre. Pequeña tiene su orgullo. Estos tres adolescentes se tienen el uno al otro y no se hacen ilusiones sobre la ciudad donde crecieron. A pesar del amor de su familia, las amenazas los acechan en cada esquina, y cuando son demasiado reales como para ignorarlas, el trio sabe que no tiene más opción que huir: de su país, de sus familias, y de su querido hogar.

En su travesía desde Guatemala hacia Estados Unidos a través de México, siguen la ruta de La Bestia, el peligroso tren de carga que los conducirá a una vida mejor, si tienen suficiente suerte como para sobrevivir el viaje. Sin nada mas que una mochila a sus espaldas, y la desesperación que hace palpitar sus corazones, Pulga, Chico y Pequeña saben que no hay vuelta atrás, sin importar los peligros desconocidos que les esperan.

En este impresionante retrato de tres vidas injustamente destrozadas, basado en hechos reales, Jenny Torres-Sanchez resalta el sacrificio de los migrantes en la frontera sur a través de una narración vivida y conmovedora.

ENGLISH DESCRIPTION

Pulga has his dreams.
Chico has his grief.
Pequeña has her pride.

And these three teens have one another. But none of them have illusions about the town they've grown up in and the dangers that surround them. Even with the love of family, threats lurk around every corner. And when those threats become all too real, the trio knows they have no choice but to run: from their country, from their families, from their beloved home.

Crossing from Guatemala through Mexico, they follow the route of La Bestia, the perilous train system that might deliver them to a better life—if they are lucky enough to survive the journey. With nothing but the bags on their backs and desperation drumming through their hearts, Pulga, Chico, and Pequeña know there is no turning back, despite the unknown that awaits them. And the darkness that seems to follow wherever they go.

In this striking portrait of lives torn apart, the plight of migrants at the U.S. southern border is brought to light through poignant, vivid storytelling. Inspired by current events, We Are Not From Here is an epic journey of danger, resilience, heartache, and hope.

 

TEN LITTLE BIRDS/ DIEZ PAJARITOS |Picture Book

by Andrés Salguero; illustrated by Sara Palacios (Scholastic en Espanol)

Count to 10 and back again with Latin Grammy Award-winning children's musical duo 123 Andrés in this bilingual board book!

The popular song from 123 Andrés' Latin Grammy Award-winning album is cleverly and beautifully brought to life in this bright, bouncy board book! Each of the 10 birds is given a fun and silly personality, and children will love to follow along as each flies away -- and escapes a lurking kitty!

123 Andrés are gifted lyricists and storytellers, and this bilingual board book perfectly captures their energy and charm. Pura Belpré Illustration Honor recipient Sara Palacios's gorgeous illustrations elevate the text and make this book a must-have for any home or school library!

 

ON-SALE APRIL 27th, 2021

 

13th STREET #5: TUSSLE WITH THE TOOTING TARANTULAS |Middle Grade

by David Bowles; illustrated by Shane Clester

Cousins Malia, Ivan, and Dante are visiting their aunt Lucy for the summer. But on their way to Gulf City’s water park, they get lost on 13th Street. Only it’s not a street at all. It’s a strange world filled with dangerous beasts! Will the cousins find their way back to Aunt Lucy’s?

Each story in this hilarious and scary new series from award-winning author David Bowles is designed to set independent readers up for success—with short, fast-paced chapters, art on every page, and progress bars at the end of each chapter!

 

ANCHORED HEARTS|Adult Fiction, Romance

by Priscilla Oliveras (Kensington)

Award-winning photographer Alejandro Miranda hasn't been home to Key West in years--not since he left to explore broader horizons with his papi's warning echoing in his ears. He wouldn't be heading there now if it wasn't for an injury requiring months of recuperation. The drama of a prodigal son returning to his familia is bad enough, but coming home to the island paradise also means coming face to face with the girl he left behind--the one who was supposed to be by his side all along...

Anamaría Navarro was shattered when Alejandro took off without her. Traveling the world was their plan, not just his. But after her father's heart attack, there was no way she could leave--not even for the man she loved. Now ensconced in the family trade as a firefighter and paramedic, with a side hustle as a personal trainer, Anamaría is dismayed that just the sight of Alejandro is enough to rekindle the flame she's worked years to put out. And as motherly meddling pushes them together, the heat of their attraction only climbs higher. Can they learn to trust again, before the Key West sun sets on their chance at happiness?

 

THE BEAUTIFUL ONES |Adult Fantasy, Horror

by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Tor Books)

They are the Beautiful Ones, Loisail’s most notable socialites, and this spring is Nina’s chance to join their ranks, courtesy of her well-connected cousin and his calculating wife. But the Grand Season has just begun, and already Nina’s debut has gone disastrously awry. She has always struggled to control her telekinesis—neighbors call her the Witch of Oldhouse—and the haphazard manifestations of her powers make her the subject of malicious gossip.

When entertainer Hector Auvray arrives to town, Nina is dazzled. A telekinetic like her, he has traveled the world performing his talents for admiring audiences. He sees Nina not as a witch, but ripe with potential to master her power under his tutelage. With Hector’s help, Nina’s talent blossoms, as does her love for him.

But great romances are for fairytales, and Hector is hiding a truth from Nina — and himself—that threatens to end their courtship before it truly begins.

The Beautiful Ones is a charming tale of love and betrayal, and the struggle between conformity and passion, set in a world where scandal is a razor-sharp weapon.

 

CHICA, WHY NOT?: HOW TO LIVE WITH INTENTION AND MANIFEST A LIFE THAT LOVES YOU BACK |Adult Nonfiction

by Sandra Hinojosa Ludwig (Hay House)

For those who feel stuck in life, who don't see a way forward, who don't believe they deserve to claim their dreams, Sandra Hinojosa Ludwig has one question: Chica, Why Not? With this book, you will find all the tools you need to accept that the life of your dreams is not only within reach, it is your right.

Sandra grew up in Mexico, where she experienced violence, frustration, and sadness as everyday settings. After unsuccessfully chasing happiness in a corporate career, she found deeper meaning in spirituality and now helps others to realize their dreams while still being true to themselves and their roots.

In this book, she guides you through her six-step program for manifesting the life you want, addressing career, family, love, wealth, and health. She gently breaks down the most common fears and excuses people make that hold them back, inviting you to practice self-compassion as you overcome your own fears and limiting beliefs as well as outside pressures-including familial and cultural expectations familiar to some in the Latino community.

 

SPIRIT UNTAMED: THE MOVIE NOVEL|Middle Grade

by Claudia Guadalupe Martinez (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

Lucky Prescott never really knew her late mother, Milagro Navarro, a fearless horse-riding stunt performer. Like her mother, Lucky isn’t exactly a fan of rules and restrictions. When her aunt Cora moves them from their East Coast city to live in Miradero with Lucky’s father, Lucky is decidedly unimpressed with the sleepy little town. She has a change of heart when she meets Spirit, a wild Mustang who shares her independent streak, and befriends two local horseback riders, Abigail Stone and Pru Granger. When a heartless horse wrangler plots to capture Spirit and his herd and auction them off to a life of captivity and hard labor, Lucky enlists her new friends and bravely embarks on the adventure of a lifetime to rescue the horse who has given her freedom, a sense of purpose, and who has helped Lucky discover a connection to her mother’s legacy.

 

ON-SALE APRIL 30th, 2021

 

THINGS TO PACK ON THE WAY TO EVERYWHERE | Poetry

by Dr. Grisel Y. Acosta (Get Fresh Books)

Things to Pack on the Way to Everywhere, by Dr. Grisel Y. Acosta, is a blueprint for Afro-Latinx adventurers who want to keep their sanity in a world that does not value the history or contributions of Black/Latinx women. The author shares moments of despair, anger, elation, joy, and love, as she pieces together her history and ancestry, while finding catharsis through Black punk revolutionaries like Poly Styrene and the Chicago House movement. Follow her journey toward empowerment while fighting sexism and neoliberalism in the medical industry, academia, and in a world-wide pandemic. Watch as she decides that we all have time for self-care and dance, even as the world descends into chaos.

 

CHOLA SALVATION|Adult Fiction, literary

by Estella González (Arte Público Press)

In the title story of this collection, Isabela is minding her family’s restaurant, drinking her dad’s beer, when Frida Kahlo and the Virgen de Guadalupe walk in. Even though they’re dressed like cholas, the girl immediately recognizes Frida’s uni-brow and La Virgen’s crown. They want to give her advice about the quinceañera her parents are forcing on her. In fact, their lecture (don’t get pregnant, go to school, be proud of your indigenous roots) helps Isabela to escape her parents’ physical and sexual abuse. But can she really run away from the self-hatred they’ve created?

These inter-related stories, mostly set in East Los Angeles, uncover the lives of a conflicted Mexican-American community. In “Sábado Gigante,” Bernardo drinks himself into a stupor every Saturday night. “Aquí no es mi tierra,” he cries, as he tries to ease the sorrow of a life lived far from home. Meanwhile, his son Gustavo struggles with his emerging gay identity and Maritza, the oldest daughter, is expected to cook and clean for her brother, even though they live in East LA, not Guadalajara or Chihuahua. In “Powder Puff,” Mireya spends hours every day applying her make-up, making sure to rub the foundation all the way down her neck so it looks like her natural color. But no matter how much she rubs and rubs, her skin is no lighter.

Estella Gonzalez vividly captures her native East LA in these affecting stories about a marginalized people dealing with racism, machismo and poverty. In painful and sometimes humorous scenes, young people try to escape the traditional expectations of their family. Other characters struggle with anger and resentment, often finding innovative ways to exact revenge for slights both real and imagined.  Throughout, music—traditional and contemporary—accompanies them in the search for love and acceptance.

Extraordinary Indigenous Latin American Legends: The Sea-Ringed World by María García Esperón

Written by María García Esperón, illustrated by Amanda Mijangos, and translated by David Bowles, The Sea-Ringed World: Sacred Stories of the Americas is a book that contains many legends about the origins of the world we live in and that analyze one’s connection to Mother Earth. From a variety of Indigenous cultures—North, Central, and South America—it’s a collection of extraordinary fables that have been passed down through generations. This book review will be focusing on the Indigenous legends from Latin America.

Credit: LevineQuerido.

Credit: LevineQuerido.

This novel dives into many Indigenous Latin American folklore that plenty of us may have grown up with—from the Mayas and the Mexica (Aztecs) of Mexico, to Colombia’s Muisca tribe and the Mapuche of Chile. Beautifully written by María García Esperón, it will transport you back to a time where ancient civilizations also sought to understand their place in the sea-ringed world we live in and the nature of their relationship with the divine. 

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Let’s start off with a couple of legends I grew up listening to from my tía on a warm summer day. The famous volcanoes Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl (Nahua legend) once upon a time were a princess and a warrior, respectively, who fell in love instantly, only to be separated by lies from the king. How they became volcanoes unfolds throughout the story, and these volcanoes are still standing to this day. Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent, is also presented in various stories, and his actions as God of the Sun affect others’ folklore.


The origins of Mexico City (once named Tenochtitlan) are richly described in the Aztlan folktale (Nahua legend). It begins with a Mexica (Aztec) prince named Mexitli, who is told by the god Huitzilopochtli—Blue Hummingbird of the South—that his people must paint themselves a new beginning. Thus, the Mexica embark on a journey, which also leads to Mexico’s distinguishable central emblem. Readers will also learn about Huitzilopochtli’s origins, and how his story weaves with others.

Credit: Yvonne Tapia.

Credit: Yvonne Tapia.

There is also a wondrous folktale behind the magnificent front cover art, with Mijangos’ astounding use of blue, black, and white that gives readers an elevated form of storytelling. The four wise whales belong to the Brave Souls of the Dead folktale (Mapuche legend), who guide the brave souls to infinity. Additionally, readers will learn about the origins of Lake Tota, the largest in Colombia in the Monetá folktale (Muisca legend), among other iconic locations. 

Credit: Yvonne Tapia.

Credit: Yvonne Tapia.

These stories also hold sorrowful truths about past beings, such as the widely known la Llorona (Nahua and colonial legend) and the reason behind her actions, and the endless mission of the Hummingbird for his beloved. Moreover, there are legends that may have more than one interpretation, like the Hurakan (Maya legend) folktale, which may serve as a precaution to remember to be thankful for what Mother Earth and the gods have given. 


The art enchants you further into these folktales through its trio of colors that enhance them, making you want more. And, as is with a vast number of ancient folktales, there’s a moral lesson to be learned and reflected upon from each Indigenous Latin American story. It is recommended one should read each of them carefully, and think about what they’re telling you regarding one’s place in the universe, and how one interacts with people, things, and nature. 


As someone who grew up hearing some of these Indigenous Latin American stories, having this collection is a thrill and honor to read on the printed page. The Sea-Ringed World: Sacred Stories of the Americas demands to be read aloud, as per tradition. 


The book is available with a simultaneous Spanish edition, ¡Cuentos sagrados de América! Los hará pasar tiempo juntos y los pondrá a reflexionar sobre muchas cosas. Es una joya para la cultura y todas las edades. ¡Espero lo disfruten! Happy reading! 


María García Esperón was born in Mexico City and has won many awards, including the Hispanic American Poetry Award for Children. Her novel Dido for Aeneas was selected in 2016 on the IBBY Honour List.

Follow on Twitter: @MGarciaEsperon 

Follow on Instagram: @MariaGarciaEsperon

Amanda Mijangos was born in Mexico City and is the founder of the illustration studio Cuarto para las 3. Her work has been recognized with awards several times and in 2017 she was the winner of the VIII Iberoamerica Illustra Catalog.

Follow on Instagram: @AmandaMijangos

David Bowles is a Mexican American author and translator from South Texas. Among his multiple award-winning books are Feathered Serpent, Dark Heart of Sky: Myths of Mexico, and They Call Me Güero. In 2017, David was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters. 

Follow on Instagram: @DavidOBowles 


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Yvonne Tapia is a Mexican-American professional from East Harlem, New York. She earned a BA in Media Studies and Psychology from Hunter College. Additionally, she has worked in the educational and media fields through various outlets. With a long-term enthusiasm for children’s media, she has been involved at Housing Works Bookstore and Latinx in Publishing. She currently works on the Marketing and Publicity team at Levine Querido. Yvonne is excited about the power of storytelling, and dedicated to engage content awareness in underrepresented communities.

March 2021 Latinx Releases

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March 2, 2021

BROTHER, SISTER, MOTHER, EXPLORER | Fiction

by Jamie Figueroa (Catapult)

In the tourist town of Ciudad de Tres Hermanas, in the aftermath of their mother's passing, two siblings spend a final weekend together in their childhood home. Seeing her brother, Rafa, careening toward a place of no return, Rufina devises a bet: if they can make enough money performing for privileged tourists in the plaza over the course of the weekend to afford a plane ticket out, Rafa must commit to living. If not, Rufina will make her peace with Rafa's own plan for the future, however terrifying it may be.

As the siblings reckon with generational and ancestral trauma, set against the indignities of present-day prejudice, other strange hauntings begin to stalk these pages: their mother's ghost kicks her heels against the walls; Rufina's vanished child creeps into her arms at night; and above all this, watching over the siblings, a genderless, flea-bitten angel remains hell-bent on saving what can be saved.

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DECODING “DESPACITO”: AN ORAL HISTORY OF LATIN MUSIC | Nonfiction

by Leila Cobo (Vintage)

Decoding “Despacito” tracks the stories behind the biggest Latin hits of the past fifty years. From the salsa born and bred in the streets of New York City, to Puerto Rican reggaetón and bilingual chart-toppers, this rich oral history is a veritable treasure trove of never-before heard anecdotes and insight from a who’s who of Latin music artists, executives, observers, and players. Their stories, told in their own words, take you inside the hits, to the inner sanctum of the creative minds behind the tracks that have defined eras and become hallmarks of history.

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DEFINITELY DOMINGUITA: KNIGHT OF THE CAPE | Middle Grade

by Terry Catasus Jennings; Illustrated by Fatima Anaya (Aladdin)

All Dominguita wants to do is read. Especially the books in Spanish that Abuela gave to her just before she moved away. They were classics that Abuela and Dominguita read together, classics her abuela brought with her all the way from Cuba when she was a young girl. It helps Dominguita feel like Abuela’s still there with her.

One of her favorites, Don Quixote, tells of a brave knight errant who tries to do good deeds. Dominguita decides that she, too, will become a knight and do good deeds around her community, creating a grand adventure for her to share with her abuela. And when the class bully tells Dominguita that girls can’t be knights, Dom is determined to prove him wrong. With a team of new friends, can Dominguita learn how to be the hero of her own story?

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DEFINITELY DOMINGUITA: CAPTAIN DOM’S TREASURE | Middle Grade

by Terry Catasus Jennings; Illustrated by Fatima Anaya (Scholastic)

When Dominguita finds an old map in the back of an even older book in her beloved library, she is excited to see a telltale X marking an unknown place. Everyone knows that X marks the spot for treasure—and Dom knows that means a new adventure for her, Pancho, and Steph!

But everyone seems to think that the map, while fun, probably isn’t real. Dom is determined to prove them wrong. And as the trio starts to uncover the mystery of the map, they realize that it has closer ties to the community they love than they could have imagined.

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INFINITE COUNTRY | Fiction

by Patricia Engel (Avid Reader Press)

Talia is being held at a correctional facility for adolescent girls in the forested mountains of Colombia after committing an impulsive act of violence that may or may not have been warranted. She urgently needs to get out and get back home to Bogotá, where her father and a plane ticket to the United States are waiting for her. If she misses her flight, she might also miss her chance to finally be reunited with her family in the north.

How this family came to occupy two different countries, two different worlds, comes into focus like twists of a kaleidoscope. We see Talia's parents, Mauro and Elena, fall in love in a market stall as teenagers against a backdrop of civil war and social unrest. We see them leave Bogotá with their firstborn, Karina, in pursuit of safety and opportunity in the United States on a temporary visa, and we see the births of two more children, Nando and Talia, on American soil. We witness the decisions and indecisions that lead to Mauro's deportation and the family's splintering--the costs they've all been living with ever since.

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INFINITY REAPER | Young Adult

by Adam Silvera (Quill Tree Books)

Emil and Brighton defied the odds. They beat the Blood Casters and escaped with their lives – or so they thought. When Brighton drank the Reaper's Blood, he believed it would make him invincible, but instead the potion is killing him.

In Emil's race to find an antidote that will not only save his brother but also rid him of his own unwanted phoenix powers, he will have to dig deep into the very past lives he's trying to outrun. Though he needs the help of the Spell Walkers now more than ever, their ranks are fracturing, with Maribelle'sthirst for revenge sending her down a dangerous path.

Meanwhile, Ness is being abused by Senator Iron for political gain, his rare shifting ability making him a dangerous weapon. As much as Ness longs to send Emil a signal, he knows the best way to keep Emil safe from his corrupt father is to keep him at a distance.

The battle for peace is playing out like an intricate game of chess, and as the pieces on the board move into place, Emil starts to realise that he may have been competing against the wrong enemy all along . . .

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ONCE UPON A QUINCEAÑERA | Young Adult

by Monica Gomez-Hira (Harper Teen)

Carmen Aguilar just wants to make her happily ever after come true. Except apparently “happily ever after” for Carmen involves being stuck in an unpaid summer internship. Now she has to perform as a party princess! In a ball gown. During the summer. In Miami.

Fine. Except that’s only the first misfortune in what’s turning out to a summer of Utter Disaster. 

But if Carmen can manage dancing in the blistering heat, fending off an oh-so-unfortunately attractive ex, and stopping her spoiled cousin from ruining her own quinceañera—Carmen might just get that happily ever after—after all.

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STARTING OVER IN SUNSET PARK | Picture Book

by José Pelaez & Lynn McGee; Illustrated by Bianca Diaz (Tilbury House)

Jessica and her mom, Camila, must live in their cousins’ crowded apartment until Camila finds work making holiday decorations and they can afford their own place. Isolated on the playground and baffled in class, unable to understand her teacher’s instructions, Jessica is intensely homesick. But little by little, things get better. She begins to learn English, and she loves the cats she and her mom care for to earn extra money. Left behind by traveling owners, the cats make the best of their situation, inspiring Jessica to do the same.

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WHAT’S MINE AND YOURS | Fiction

by Naima Coster (Grand Central Publishing)

When a county initiative in the Piedmont of North Carolina forces the students at a mostly black public school on the east side to move across town to a nearly all-white high school on the west, the community rises in outrage. For two students, quiet and aloof Gee and headstrong Noelle, these divisions will extend far beyond their schooling. As their paths collide and overlap over the course of thirty years, their two seemingly disconnected families begin to form deeply knotted, messy ties that shape the trajectory of their lives.

On one side of the school integration debate is Jade, Gee's steely, single, black mother, grieving for her murdered partner, and determined for her son to have the best chance at a better life. On the other, is Noelle's enterprising mother, Lacey May, who refuses to see her half-Latina daughters as anything but white. The choices these mothers make will resound for years to come. And twenty years later, when Lacey's daughters return home to visit her in hospital, they're forced to confront the ways their parents' decisions continue to affect the life they live and the people they love.

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THE SOUL OF A WOMAN | Nonfiction

by Isabel Allende (Ballantine)

As a young woman coming of age in the late 1960s, she rode the second wave of feminism. Among a tribe of like-minded female journalists, Allende for the first time felt comfortable in her own skin, as they wrote “with a knife between our teeth” about women’s issues. She has seen what the movement has accomplished in the course of her lifetime. And over the course of three passionate marriages, she has learned how to grow as a woman while having a partner, when to step away, and the rewards of embracing one’s sexuality.

So what feeds the soul of feminists—and all women—today? To be safe, to be valued, to live in peace, to have their own resources, to be connected, to have control over our bodies and lives, and above all, to be loved. On all these fronts, there is much work yet to be done, and this book, Allende hopes, will “light the torches of our daughters and granddaughters with mine. They will have to live for us, as we lived for our mothers, and carry on with the work still left to be finished.”

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March 9, 2021

I’LL MEET YOU IN YOUR DREAMS | Picture Book

by Jessica Young; Illustrated by Rafael López (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

This poetic and tender story celebrates the parent-and-child bond in its many forms and offers gentle assurance of love across a lifetime. Two parents' dreams of the future with their children—from early dependence for nourishment and basic needs, to the parent as home base for a child in later life—mirror an always-changing but unbreakable relationship.

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THE RAMBLE SHAMBLE CHILDREN | Picture Book

by Christina Soontornvat; Illustrated by Lauren Castillo (Nancy Paulsen)

Merra, Locky, Roozle, Finn, and little Jory love their ramble shamble house. It's a lot of work taking care of the garden, the chickens, and themselves, but they all pitch in to make it easier--even Jory, who looks after the mud puddles. When they come across a picture of a "proper" house in a book, they start wondering if their own home is good enough. So they get to work "propering up" the garden, the chickens, and even the mud puddles. But the results aren't exactly what they expected, and when their now-proper household's youngest member goes missing, they realize that their ramble shamble home might be just right for their family, after all.

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March 16, 2021

COQUÍ IN THE CITY | Picture Book

by Nomar Perez (Dial Books)

Miguel's pet frog, Coquí, is always with him: as he greets his neighbors in San Juan, buys quesitos from the panadería, and listens to his abuelo's story about meeting baseball legend Roberto Clemente. Then Miguel learns that he and his parents are moving to the U.S. mainland, which means leaving his beloved grandparents, home in Puerto Rico, and even Coquí behind. Life in New York City is overwhelming, with unfamiliar buildings, foods, and people. But when he and Mamá go exploring, they find a few familiar sights that remind them of home, and Miguel realizes there might be a way to keep a little bit of Puerto Rico with him--including the love he has for Coquí--wherever he goes.

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THE MIRROR SEASON | Young Adult

by Anna-Marie McLemore (Feiwel & Friends)

When two teens discover that they were both sexually assaulted at the same party, they develop a cautious friendship through her family’s possibly-magical pastelería, his secret forest of otherworldly trees, and the swallows returning to their hometown, in Anna-Marie McLemore's The Mirror Season...

Graciela Cristales’ whole world changes after she and a boy she barely knows are assaulted at the same party. She loses her gift for making enchanted pan dulce. Neighborhood trees vanish overnight, while mirrored glass appears, bringing reckless magic with it. And Ciela is haunted by what happened to her, and what happened to the boy whose name she never learned.

But when the boy, Lock, shows up at Ciela’s school, he has no memory of that night, and no clue that a single piece of mirrored glass is taking his life apart. Ciela decides to help him, which means hiding the truth about that night. Because Ciela knows who assaulted her, and him. And she knows that her survival, and his, depend on no one finding out what really happened.

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SI YO PUDE…¡TÚ MÁS! | Nonfiction

by Maria Antonieta Collins (Vintage Español)

María Antonieta Collins perdió seis tallas y más de 40 kilos gracias a una cirugía bariátrica y a un cambio radical en sus hábitos alimenticios por una vida más sana, ligera y feliz. Era pre-diabética, tomaba dos pastillas al día para la presión, una para el colesterol, y usaba la máquina de apnea del sueño y una aspirina diaria para prevenir los infartos. Mientras vivía el mejor momento de su carrera, disfrutando de los ratings más altos y viajando como corresponsal de noticias, María Antonieta Collins decidió cambiar radicalmente su vida y aprovechar nuevas oportunidades para convertirse en una mejor versión de sí misma.

Si yo pude…¡tú más! responde a las preguntas que millones de admiradores han planteado a María Antonieta sobre su asombrosa transformación, y será una fuente de inspiración para los lectores que estén en situaciones similares o cualquiera que desee cambiar su vida. María Antonieta comparte abiertamente su camino al éxito de manera fácil, informativa y entretenida, con la colaboración de su hija Antonieta y de los especialistas que la ayudaron a recorrer este camino de transformación. Los lectores reconocerán que todo tiene un lado positivo, y que renunciar a la esperanza nunca es una opción.

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SPARK | Picture Book

by Ani Castillo (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

Beginning with the birth of a baby, the story takes the reader on a journey through life, navigates the ups and downs, and culminates in a deeply satisfying sense of the wonder and awe in being human.

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March 22, 2021

FLOWER GRAND FIRST | Poetry

by Gustavo Hernandez (Moon Tide Press)

Flower Grand First, moves through the complex roads of immigration, sexuality, and loss. These poems are points plotted on maps both physical and emotional—the rural landscapes of Jalisco, the glimmering plains of memory, the busy cities of California, and the circular paths of grief. Hernandez’s stunning elegies float along a timeline spanning three decades, honoring family, recording a personal history, and revealing a vulnerable but resilient voice preoccupied with time, place, and what is left behind out of necessity.

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March 23, 2021

THE IMMORTAL BOY | Young Adult

by Francisco Montaña Ibañez (Levine Querido)

Two intertwining stories of Bogotá.

One, a family of five children, left to live on their own.

The other, a girl in an orphanage who will do anything to befriend the mysterious Immortal Boy.

How they weave together will never leave you.

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LOST IN THE NEVER WOODS | Young Adult

by Aiden Thomas (Swoon Reads)

It's been five years since Wendy and her two brothers went missing in the woods, but when the town’s children start to disappear, the questions surrounding her brothers’ mysterious circumstances are brought back into light. Attempting to flee her past, Wendy almost runs over an unconscious boy lying in the middle of the road, and gets pulled into the mystery haunting the town.

Peter, a boy she thought lived only in her stories, claims that if they don't do something, the missing children will meet the same fate as her brothers. In order to find them and rescue the missing kids, Wendy must confront what's waiting for her in the woods.

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SULPHURTONGUE | Poetry

by Rebecca Salazar (McClelland & Stewart)

The poems in sulphurtongue ask how to redefine desire and kinship across languages, and across polluted environments. An immigrant family scatters over a stolen continent. Oracles appear in public transit, and online. Bodies are transformed by nearby nickel mines. Doppelgangers, Catholic saints, and polyamorists alike pass on unusual inheritances. Deeply entangled in relations both emotional and ecological, this collection confronts the stories we tell about gender, queerness, race, religion, illness, and trauma, seeking new forms of care for a changing world.

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YOUR HEART, MY SKY | Young Adult

by Margarita Engle (Atheneum Books for Young Readers)

The people of Cuba are living in el período especial en tiempos de paz—the special period in times of peace. That’s what the government insists that this era must be called, but the reality behind these words is starvation.

Liana is struggling to find enough to eat. Yet hunger has also made her brave: she finds the courage to skip a summer of so-called volunteer farm labor, even though she risks government retribution. Nearby, a quiet, handsome boy named Amado also refuses to comply, so he wanders alone, trying to discover rare sources of food.

A chance encounter with an enigmatic dog brings Liana and Amado together. United in hope and hunger, they soon discover that their feelings for each other run deep. Love can feed their souls and hearts—but is it enough to withstand el período especial?

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March 30, 2021

MY DAY WITH THE PANYE | Picture Book

by Tami Charles; Illustrated by Sara Palacios (Candlewick Press)

In the hills above Port-au-Prince, a young girl named Fallon wants more than anything to carry a large woven basket to the market, just like her Manman. As she watches her mother wrap her hair in a mouchwa, Fallon tries to twist her own braids into a scarf and balance the empty panye atop her head, but realizes it’s much harder than she thought. BOOM! Is she ready after all? Lyrical and inspiring, with vibrant illustrations highlighting the beauty of Haiti, My Day with the Panye is a story of family legacy, cultural tradition, and hope for the future. Readers who are curious about the art of carrying a panye will find more about this ancient and global practice in an author’s note at the end.

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THE HAZARDS OF LOVE | Graphic Novel

by Stan Stanley (Oni Press)

The Hazards of Love follows the story of a queer teen from Queens who makes some mistakes, gets dragged into a fantastical place, and tries to hustle their way back home.

Amparo's deal with the talking cat was simple: a drop of blood and Amparo's name to become a better person. Their mother and abuela would never worry about them again, and they'd finally be worthy of dating straight-A student Iolanthe. But when the cat steals their body, becoming the better person they were promised, Amparo's spirit is imprisoned in a land of terrifying, flesh-hungry creatures known as Bright World.

With cruel and manipulative masters and a society that feeds on memories, Amparo must use their cleverness to escape, without turning into a monster like the rest. On "the other side," Iolanthe begins to suspect the new Amparo has a secret, and after the cat in disguise vanishes, she's left searching for answers with a no-nonsense medium from the lesbian mafia and the only person who might know the truth about Bright World.

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OF WOMEN AND SALT | Fiction

by Gabriela Garcia (Flatiron Books)

In present-day Miami, Jeanette is battling addiction. Daughter of Carmen, a Cuban immigrant, she is determined to learn more about her family history from her reticent mother and makes the snap decision to take in the daughter of a neighbor detained by ICE. Carmen, still wrestling with the trauma of displacement, must process her difficult relationship with her own mother while trying to raise a wayward Jeanette. Steadfast in her quest for understanding, Jeanette travels to Cuba to see her grandmother and reckon with secrets from the past destined to erupt.

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ZONIA’S RAIN FOREST | Picture Books

by Juana Martínez-Neal (Candlewick)

Zonia’s home is the Amazon rain forest, where it is always green and full of life. Every morning, the rain forest calls to Zonia, and every morning, she answers. She visits the sloth family, greets the giant anteater, and runs with the speedy jaguar. But one morning, the rain forest calls to her in a troubled voice. How will Zonia answer?

Exclusive Cover Reveal: Child of the Flower-Song People by Gloria Amescua, illustrated by Duncan Tonatiuh

Cover art (c) Duncan Tonatiuh, Cover Designer Heather Kelly

Cover art (c) Duncan Tonatiuh, Cover Designer Heather Kelly

Latinx in Publishing is pleased to exclusively reveal the cover for CHILD OF THE FLOWER-SONG PEOPLE: LUZ JIMÉNEZ, DAUGHTER OF THE NAHUA written by Gloria Amescua, illustrated by Duncan Tonatiuh publishing August 17th from Abrams Books for Young Readers. Read on for the official book synopsis and to view the gorgeous cover!

 

From debut author Gloria Amescua and award-winning illustrator Duncan Tonatiuh, a lyrical biography of an indigenous Nahua woman from Mexico who taught and preserved her people's culture through modeling for famous artists.

She was Luz Jiménez,
child of the flower-song people,
the powerful Aztec,
who called themselves Nahua—
who lost their land but who did not disappear.


As a young Nahua girl in Mexico during the early 1900s, Luz learned how to grind corn in a metate, to twist yarn with her toes, and to weave on a loom. By the fire at night, she listened to stories of her community’s joys, suffering, and survival, and wove them into her heart.

But when the Mexican Revolution came to her village, Luz and her family were forced to flee and start a new life. In Mexico City, Luz became a model for painters, sculptors, and photographers such as Diego Rivera, Jean Charlot, and Tina Modotti. These artists were interested in showing the true face of Mexico and not a European version. Through her work, Luz found a way to preserve her people's culture by sharing her native language, stories, and traditions. Soon, scholars came to learn from her.

This moving, beautifully illustrated biography tells the remarkable story of how model and teacher Luz Jiménez became “the soul of Mexico”—a living link between the indigenous Nahua and the rest of the world. Through her deep pride in her roots and her unshakeable spirit, the world came to recognize the beauty and strength of her people.

The book includes an author’s note, timeline, glossary, and bibliography.

 
(c) Sam Bond Photography

(c) Sam Bond Photography

Gloria Amescua is an educator, poet, and children’s book writer. She was awarded Lee & Low’s New Voices Honor Award and was named a finalist for the Austin SCBWI Cynthia Leitich Smith Mentorship program. Native and current Austinite, Gloria received both her B.A. and M.Ed. degrees from the University of Texas at Austin. This is her first picture book.

 
(c) Eugenia Tinajero

(c) Eugenia Tinajero

Duncan Tonatiuh is an award-winning author-illustrator whose numerous accolades include the Sibert Medal, the Pura Belpré Award, and many Honors. He is both Mexican and American. His artwork is inspired by Pre-Columbian art, particularly that of the Mixtec codices. His aim is to create images and stories that honor the past, but that are relevant to people today, especially children. He grew up in and currently lives in San Miguel de Allende, México with his wife and children, but travels to the US often.

LxP Writers Mentorship Showcase: Angela Pico

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The Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Showcase series features excerpts by our Class of 2020 mentees from the projects they’ve developed with the guidance of their mentors.

The LxP Writers Mentorship Program is an annual volunteer-based initiative that offers the opportunity for unpublished and/or unagented writers who identify as Latinx (mentees) to strengthen their craft, gain first-hand industry knowledge, and expand their professional connections through work with experienced published authors (mentors).

Below is an excerpt from one of our 2020 mentees in picture books, Angela Pico:


Making hot chocolate with Abuelita is a fiesta.

We melt the toasty, buttery bar, 

and a silky, rich and coffee-colored miel it becomes. 

It’s our special tradition.

“La tradición de nosotras,” Abuelita tells me, “tu y yo. 

 Cuando era pequeña  

mi abuelita me enseñó a hacer chocolate.” 

Knowing Abuelita’s grandma made hot chocolate with her 

makes me feel connected 

to all the abuelitas in my family.  

The abuelitas que hablaban español, 

who shared secretos and fortunes through chocolate, 

the velvelty, milky honey, 

that now Abuelita shares with me.

But this time in English too.  

Used with permission from author, copyright (c) Angela Pico 2020.


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Angela Pico was born in Bogotá, Colombia and grew up in western North Carolina.  She holds a BA in Romance Languages and Literatures from Pomona College, an MFA in Spanish Creative Writing from the University of Iowa, and is currently working on an MA in French Literature and Francophone Studies at the University of Iowa.  Angela currently lives in Iowa City, where she is a university instructor and a student. She teaches Latina/o/x Literature in the U.S. at the University of Iowa. She is passionate about writing for children and validating Latina/o/x voices.  She also writes poetry for adults.
https://www.angelapicowriter.com

February 2021 Latinx Releases

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February 1, 2021

THE GREATEST SUPERPOWER | Middle Grade

by Alex Sanchez (Capstone)

It’s the summer before high school, and thirteen-year-old Jorge Fuerte wants nothing more than to spend his days hanging out with his fellow comic-book-obsessed friends. But then everything changes. His parents announce they’re divorcing for a reason Jorge and his twin brother, Cesar, never saw coming—their larger-than-life dad comes out as transgender. Jorge struggles to understand the father he’s always admired, but Cesar refuses to have anything to do with him. As Jorge tries to find a way to stay true to the father he loves, a new girl moves into the neighborhood: cool, confident, quirky Zoey. She tames Jorge’s unruly terrier and enlists the terrier and Jorge in a dance routine for the back-to-school talent show. As the date of the show draws near, Jorge must face his fears and choose between being loyal to his brother or truthful about his family’s secret. Although he’s no superhero, Jorge already has the world’s greatest superpower—if he decides to use it.

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February 2, 2021

COUGAR CROSSING | Picture Book

by Meeg Pincus; Illus. by Alexander Vidal (Little, Brown for Young Readers)

P-22, the famed “Hollywood Cougar,” was born in a national park near Los Angeles, California. When it was time for him to leave home and stake a claim to his own territory, he embarked on a perilous journey—somehow crossing sixteen lanes of the world’s worst traffic—to make his home in LA’s Griffith Park, overlooking the famed Hollywood sign. But Griffith Park is a tiny territory for a mountain lion, and P-22’s life has been filled with struggles.

Residents of Los Angeles have embraced this brave cougar as their own and, along with the scientists monitoring P-22, raised money to build a wildlife bridge across Highway 101 to help cougars and other wildlife safely expand their territories and build new homes—ensuring their survival for years to come.

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FAT CHANCE, CHARLIE VEGA | Young Adult

by Crystal Maldonado (Holiday House)

Charlie Vega is a lot of things. Smart. Funny. Artistic. Ambitious. Fat.

People sometimes have a problem with that last one. Especially her mom. Charlie wants a good relationship with her body, but it's hard, and her mom leaving a billion weight loss shakes on her dresser doesn't help. The world and everyone in it have ideas about what she should look like: thinner, lighter, slimmer-faced, straighter-haired. Be smaller. Be whiter. Be quieter.

But there's one person who's always in Charlie's corner: her best friend Amelia. Slim. Popular. Athletic. Totally dope. So when Charlie starts a tentative relationship with cute classmate Brian, the first worthwhile guy to notice her, everything is perfect until she learns one thing--he asked Amelia out first. So is she his second choice or what? Does he even really see her?

Because it's time people did.

A sensitive, funny, and painful coming-of-age story with a wry voice and tons of chisme, Fat Chance, Charlie Vega tackles our relationships to our parents, our bodies, our cultures, and ourselves.

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FLOOD CITY | Middle Grade

by Daniel José Older (Scholastic)

Welcome to Flood City, the last inhabitable place left above the waters that cover Earth. It's also the last battleground between the Chemical Barons, who once ruled the planet and now circle overhead in spaceships, desperate to return, and the Star Guard, who have controlled the city for decades.

Born and raised in Flood City, Max doesn't care about being part of either group. All he wants is to play his music with the city band, keep his sister from joining the Star Guard, and be noticed by his crush, the awesome drummer Djinna.

Meanwhile, Ato, a young Chemical Baron, has joined his crew for what was supposed to be a routine surveillance mission, only things go from bad to worse between unexplained iguanagull attacks and the discovery of deadly schemes. Ato's just trying to stay safe, keep his twin brother alive, and not hurt anyone. So when his commander prepares to wipe out Flood City completely, Ato must decide how far he'll go.

As Max's and Ato's paths collide, it changes everything. Because they might be able to stop a coming war. But can two enemies work together to save Earth?

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MUTED | Young Adult

by Tami Charles (Scholastic)

For seventeen-year-old Denver, music is everything. Writing, performing, and her ultimate goal: escaping her very small, very white hometown.

So Denver is more than ready on the day she and her best friends Dali and Shak sing their way into the orbit of the biggest R&B star in the world, Sean "Mercury" Ellis. Merc gives them everything: parties, perks, wild nights — plus hours and hours in the recording studio. Even the painful sacrifices and the lies the girls have to tell are all worth it.

Until they're not.

Denver begins to realize that she's trapped in Merc's world, struggling to hold on to her own voice. As the dream turns into a nightmare, she must make a choice: lose her big break, or get broken.

Inspired by true events, Muted is a fearless exploration of the dark side of the music industry, the business of exploitation, how a girl's dreams can be used against her — and what it takes to fight back.

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THE YEAR I FLEW AWAY | Middle Grade

by Marie Arnold (Versify)

It’s 1985 and ten-year-old Gabrielle is excited to be moving from Haiti to America. Unfortunately, her parents won’t be able to join her yet and she’ll be living in a place called Brooklyn, New York, with relatives she has never met. She promises her parents that she will behave, but life proves to be difficult in the United States, from learning the language to always feeling like she doesn’t fit in to being bullied. So when a witch offers her a chance to speak English perfectly and be “American,” she makes the deal. But soon she realizes how much she has given up by trying to fit in and, along with her two new friends (one of them a talking rat), takes on the witch in an epic battle to try to reverse the spell.

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February 16, 2021

WHERE WONDER GROWS | Picture Book

by Xelena González; Illus. by Adriana M. Garcia (Cinco Puntos Press)

Grandma knows that there is wondrous knowledge to be found everywhere you can think to look. She takes her girls to their special garden, and asks them to look over their collection of rocks, crystals, seashells, and meteorites to see what marvels they have to show. “They were here long before us and know so much more about our world than we ever will,” Grandma says. So they are called grandfathers. By taking a close look with an open mind, they see the strength of rocks shaped by volcanoes, the cleansing power of beautiful crystals, the oceans that housed their shells and shapes its environment, and the long journey meteorites took to find their way to them. Gathered together, Grandma and the girls let their surroundings spark their imaginations.

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February 23, 2021

LATINITAS: CELEBRATING 40 BIG DREAMERS | Middle Grade

by Julie Menéndez (Holt Books for Young Readers)

Discover how 40 influential Latinas became the women we celebrate today! In this collection of short biographies from all over Latin America and across the United States, Juliet Menéndez explores the first small steps that set the Latinitas off on their journeys. With gorgeous, hand-painted illustrations, Menéndez shines a spotlight on the power of childhood dreams.

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THE SEA-RINGED WORLD: SACRED STORIES OF THE AMERICAS | Middle Grade

by María García Esperón; Illus. by Amanda Mijangos (Levine Querido)

Fifteen thousand years before Europeans stepped foot in the Americas, people had already spread from tip to tip and coast to coast. Like all humans, these Native Americans sought to understand their place in the universe, the nature of their relationship with the divine, and the origin of the world into which their ancestors had emerged.

The answers lay in their sacred stories.

Author María García Esperón, illustrator Amanda Mijangos, and translator David Bowles have gifted us a treasure. Their talents have woven this collection of stories from nations and cultures across our two continents—the Sea-Ringed World, as the Aztecs called it—from the edge of Argentina all the way up to Alaska.

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THERE GOES PATTI MCGEE! | Picture Book

by Tootie Nienow; Illus. by Erika Medina (FSG Books for Young Readers)

Brought to life by Erika Medina's dynamic and joyful illustrations, There Goes Patti McGee! walks us through Patti first place win in the women's division of the 1964 National Skateboard Championship. She wowed the judges with with what would become her signature move--the rolling handstand. Inspiring and unapologetic, Patti McGee proves that anyone can skate.

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THRIVING IN THE FIGHT | Nonfiction

by Denise Padín Collazo (Berrett-Koehler Publishers)

Social justice work is more crucial than ever, but it can be physically and emotionally draining. Longtime activist Denise Collazo offers three keys to help Hispanic women keep their focus, morale, and energy high.

Doing the work of social change is hard. Waking up every day to take on the biggest challenges of our time can be overwhelming, and sometimes progress is hard to see. She understands that Latina and all women of color activists do their best work when they are thriving, not simply surviving.

Denise Padín Collazo has been there. She is the first Latina, the first woman of color, and the first woman period to raise a family and stay in the work of community organizing at Faith in Action, an international progressive network of 3,000 congregations and 2 million members. Drawing on her own experiences of triumph and failure, and those of other Latina activists, Collazo lays out three keys to thriving in the movement for social change: leading into your vision, living into the fullest version of yourself, and loving past negatives that hold you back. She also warns about the three signs that you may be surrendering: wishing for a future reality to emerge, wondering where your limits are, and waiting for permission and answers to come from others.

Using this framework, Collazo offers wise and compassionate advice on some of the most important leadership challenges facing Latina activists. She explains how you can integrate family and work, step out of the background and claim your leadership potential, confront anti-Blackness in your own culture, keep focused on your ultimate purpose, and raise the necessary resources to keep fighting for justice. This honest, practical, and inspirational book will help Latina activists to burn bright, not burn out.

The Valor of Being You with FURIA by Yamile Saied Méndez

Yamile Saied Méndez’s YA debut, Furia, is an insightful and blazing exploration of a teen’s courage and determination to succeed against all obstacles, set in fútbol-fevered Rosario, Argentina. Camila Hassan is a seventeen-year old futbolista, eager to make it in the big leagues and have better career opportunities through a soccer scholarship that will allow her to study abroad in the United States. Striving away from past familial generations’ history with new possibilities, Camila is a fireball ready to take on the world. This page-turning novel is not only about soccer; it involves ambition, perseverance, friendship, love, selflessness, prejudice, toxic femininity, domestic violence, education, coming-of-age, socio-economic status, and female empowerment.

The reader immediately learns that Camila’s futbolista lifestyle is kept a secret from her family, because her parents have never supported her love for soccer, or her goal to play professionally as a woman. Her family expects Camila’s brother, Pablo, to get them out of their working-class status with his soccer playing, and, like many families in Camila’s country, believe that “soccer isn’t for decent women.” Her father goes so far as to assume, in a contemptuous manner, that she likes girls rather than boys because of her love for fútbol. Her mother strongly advocates for her to go to medical school instead. 

Credit: Algonquin Books

Credit: Algonquin Books

Initially, Camila is very judgmental of her mother’s actions—such as allowing her father to belittle her with comments about her physique—but eventually, she realizes her mother did the best she could with the resources she had. In a surprise twist, readers find out that Camila’s mother, in fact, once had the same passion for fútbol, but faced the same prejudice about it from Camila’s grandfather. This scenario examines the complexities of Latinx girlhood/womanhood, and shows how females who want to follow their dreams sometimes have to become even more resilient and unstoppable than past generations. Camila Hassan is an exemplary model of how young teens do not have to live with past familial generations’ noxious beliefs, and Furia insightfully shows the need for open-minded, understanding conversations between parents and their children.

As readers turn the pages, they may also find themselves engrossed with Camila Hassan and Diego Ferrari’s far-from-typical relationship. Diego, Camila’s childhood friend and long-time love interest, is now an international soccer player for the renowned team Juventus. He puts her at a crossroads between her career goals and love life, where she has to decide whether to prioritize her career or his. Saied Méndez eloquently shows many possible futures for young love, not only in Camila’s decisions about Diego, but through Camila’s parents’ relationship, and her brother Pablo’s relationship with his girlfriend, Marisol. The Las Musas author’s resolution for Diego and Camila is a pleasant surprise that readers won’t want to miss. It may be a necessary call to young readers that young love is not all it seems, and that it’s a disservice to let go of one’s career trajectory for someone else’s. 

Camila’s ambitious attempts to move forward are exciting to observe; along with playing soccer, she also starts her first job as an English tutor to gain more professional experience. Among the students is a little girl named Karen, whose hunger for knowledge is visible to Camila’s eyes. Camila knows that the only cure for that hunger is to feed it. She hopes that she can help Karen the way her soccer coach, Alicia, has helped her find her own agency. These sorts of examples of powerful, selfless female solidarity are something that readers could greatly benefit from seeing in more books.

Credit: Yvonne Tapia

Credit: Yvonne Tapia

Furia also touches on themes often thought to be “too difficult” for young readers, such as domestic violence. Camila and her family reach a breaking point when her father confronts all three of them—Camila, her mother, and her brother—telling them that he could have had a better life without them for many reasons. Camila realizes that she must break the cycle of abuse that has followed her female ancestors generation after generation: “[Camila’s father] lunged at [her mother], but Pablo and [Camila] both stepped in front of her. . . . whatever the consequences, [her] mom, Pablo, and [Camila] were breaking the cycle today” (308). This is the type of book that might help young readers speak up if they are living through something similar, and enlighten others that these types of situations do happen—allowing for important conversations in the classroom and beyond.

And of course, there are many great, thrilling soccer matches. Furia (“Fury” in English) is Camila’s futbolista name. Camila’s bravery and wit spark off the page as Méndez vividly describes how she runs to the park to make it to her soccer game on time, laces up her boots, and unleashes the part of her that comes alive only on the pitch, as she takes her position in the midfield and weaves through the line of defenders blocking her way to victory. Even though Camila is a shining star in her own right, the soccer scenes also demonstrate that it also takes a team to succeed. For schools, libraries, and parents, giving teens this book could help support those with sports aspirations, especially girls, and assure them that their dreams are possible—and readers are in for exceptional soccer fever in its pages.

Furia’s young protagonist, inspired by Méndez’s everyday observations of ambitious girls from limited backgrounds, is an underdog who dares to live her dream and triumphs. Camila’s “Furia” nickname speaks not only to her personality on the pitch, but to her fury against anything belittling, harsh, unjust, and harmful to society. This is a bold and rich novel, capable of making you feel quite chuffed with the ending. Any reader may see herself/himself/themselves in Camila Hassan’s story, no matter how big or small a moment it is. Kudos to the wonderful and courageous Own Voices author! Taking brave steps to shape her own present and future, Camila is a strong female leader that every generation needs on the page.


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Yvonne Tapia is a Mexican-American professional from East Harlem, New York. She earned a BA in Media Studies and Psychology from Hunter College. Additionally, she has worked in the educational and media fields through various outlets. With a long-term enthusiasm for children’s books, she has been involved at Housing Works Bookstore and Latinx in Publishing. She currently works on the Marketing and Publicity team at Levine Querido. Yvonne is excited and dedicated to engage book visibility in marginalized communities, welcoming all readers while making them feel seen and empowered. 

LxP Writers Mentorship Showcase: Gustavo Barahona-López

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The Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Showcase series features excerpts by our Class of 2020 mentees from the projects they’ve developed with the guidance of their mentors.

The LxP Writers Mentorship Program is an annual volunteer-based initiative that offers the opportunity for unpublished and/or unagented writers who identify as Latinx (mentees) to strengthen their craft, gain first-hand industry knowledge, and expand their professional connections through work with experienced published authors (mentors).

Below is a piece from one of our 2020 mentees in adult poetry, Gustavo Barahona-López:


Quarantine Meditation

After Rona Luo

 

Close your eyes, feel the sensation, 

your clothes against your body.

I close my eyes and gift my nerve-

endings all of my attention.

Feel the sensation of the air

touching your skin.

My child envelops his toddler 

hand around my pinky.

Visualize a white light,

follow it through the forest.

My child pulls me away

saying Come, come.

Cross the river, you see your 

ancestor on the shoreline.

I glance at my face on Zoom,

see my past in my features.

Your ancestor gives you a gift:

an object, a hug, a few words.

My father gifts me his eyes,

I stare into our hazel irises.

Return to the forest, listen

to the leaves. What do you see?

My child climbs on me and 

stands upright on my thigh.

Arms ready themselves to catch

but my child does not waver.

Used with permission from the author, copyright (c) Gustavo Barahona-López 2020.


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Gustavo Barahona-López is a poet and educator from Richmond, California. In his writing, Barahona-López draws from his experience growing as the son of Mexican immigrants. His micro-chapbook 'Where Will the Children Play?' is part of the Ghost City Press 2020 Summer Series. Barahona-López's work can be found or is forthcoming in Iron Horse Literary Review, Puerto del Sol, The Acentos Review, Apogee Journal, Hayden’s Ferry Review, among other publications. Twitter: @TruthSinVerdad Website: https://linktr.ee/gustavobarahonalopez

LxP Writers Mentorship Showcase: Camille Corbett

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The Latinx in Publishing Writers Mentorship Showcase series features excerpts by our Class of 2020 mentees from the projects they’ve developed with the guidance of their mentors.

The LxP Writers Mentorship Program is an annual volunteer-based initiative that offers the opportunity for unpublished and/or unagented writers who identify as Latinx (mentees) to strengthen their craft, gain first-hand industry knowledge, and expand their professional connections through work with experienced published authors (mentors).

Below is an excerpt from one of our 2020 mentees in adult fiction, Camille Corbett:


Marina

It was like a demon possessed my senses. Every smell, taste, touch, sight, and sound I encountered drew me to her. Even the gleaming ring on my finger seemed like bright green traffic light telling to go, go, go and soak in her presence.

I imagined her everywhere. I would make love to my husband as the rain crashed against our bedroom window and I would imagine each drop having previously cycled through Marina at some point in her lifetime. Through baths, face washing, swimming pools, even toilets. I desperately wanted her essence to pollute everything that I knew.

She was everywhere. Once, while I was making a late dinner she appeared in the form of a ponytail. As I was searching for the perfect pot, I found a mass of long black hair tied at the ends underneath my sink. It was hers. I still don’t know how she got in or knew that I would be looking there that day. But I didn’t care. I was happy that she thought of me enough to place herself in my life. The next day, she twirled around her apartment showing off her new pixie cut and told me to keep her ponytail for good luck.

I heard somewhere that during the Victorian age people put their loved one’s hair in lockets, or made rings out of their strands. At the time, I would have made a thousand woven bracelets of her ebony locks. However, I didn’t find out about hair being used as jewelry until she was gone and broken. Otherwise, my jewelry box would consist of nothing but a reminder that my heart was once ruled by a consuming obsession for someone who thought shame was a condition that one grew accustomed to.

One hot summer day, we decided to run away together. I was 19 and newly married and she was 26 and newly sober. We packed everything we thought we needed into our backpacks and stole our husbands’ credit cards and hitchhiked all the way from Savannah, Georgia, to Scottsdale, Arizona. I never thought we would ever make it that far. She did. I was young and conceited and I thought that a day wouldn’t pass without my entire family looking for me. Somehow she knew that wasn’t the case. No one came looking for her either. Eventually, we were bored of traveling so we turned around and went back home after living in a motel in Arizona for six weeks.

Being with Marina was like that. She would hype you up for an amazing adventure only to reveal to you some big ugly truth that you could have went all your days without knowing. After our cross-country adventure, my husband banned me from talking to her. He threatened to divorce me. And for a while, I agreed with him. But one day, while he was at work, her signature knock danced on my front door. A surge of joy and excitement went through me at once and I knew that I was trapped in her trance yet again.

She was there to make love to me. She said it had been too long. I agreed with her. But this time, I wanted everything to be on my terms.

“I don’t want you making a fool of me anymore,” I said to her, as her warm slim arms wrapped around my body.

“You know I never meant that to happen. I only wanted us to be happy together.

You know I love you too much to hurt you on purpose,” she whispered in my ear.

Her wet, plump mouth pressed against my pink, thin lips and our tongues slid and tangled and I could taste her insincerity. But I was lost in her smell. Oranges and cocoa butter wafted into my nose reminding me how close our bodies were and how long it had been. Two months. Two months of my husband’s scratchy beard and big rough hands.

Two months without her smooth, soft chest, crushing against my breasts.

I drew one last deep breath before I started drowning in the depths of her chaos, then plunged my hands down her pants. She twisted and turned and I kissed her and sucked every bit of passion I could draw from her.

When we finished, we lay hip to hip on my ugly brown carpet. Her tanned hand teased mine as we looked at the water-stained ceiling before us, contemplating our misfortune.

“We could still run away again. It’s not too late, “ she offered. But both of us were aware that the appeal of that route had perished.

“Yeah, or we could just keep seeing each other in private. I don’t want to jump into a big decision like that again,” I replied. In retrospect, I realize that I was a coward.

In that moment, I thought I was being terribly wise.

On my twentieth birthday, my husband, Sam told me he wanted a divorce. I was expecting a car. I thought it was odd how people can never really tell what you want.

Apparently, he had found someone else. Apparently, they went to that church he never failed to attend. I cried. I started throwing things I knew he worked hard for. Then I moved on to larger appliances. I lodged a golf club on the television. And stuck the toaster in the dishwasher and turned it on.

“Where am I supposed to go?” I screamed, as I slammed a hammer against our new microwave.

“I don’t care where you go. I’ve been patient. I put up with your erratic behavior. I just want to live a quiet life,” he whined.

But I won the argument in the end. He gave me another chance and I lived two years on tiptoes, occasionally gaining pleasure from a flat-footed romp with Marina while Sam was at work. I lived a double life. A part of me was dedicated to domestic perfection. I cooked, cleaned, I comforted, and I produced a child. However, the rest of me was shackled to the stolen moments I had with Marina. A few minutes of caresses left me with enough happiness for a week. Any longer, and I began to fall into a deep depression and annoyed Sam with my apathy.

Late at night, when my husband would snore and shake beside me, I imagined a life that Marina and I could share with no husbands or children. We could romp around the world and smell each other’s morning breath every single day. She was my little universe and I was her pet.

Finally, we grew sick of our secretive relationship. I longed for more than just our cheap daytime meetings tangled on my carpet. She longed for a life of her own. As she neared thirty, Marina became frightened that she had wasted her life in a cage. So we decided to run away and never return. For months we stole small amounts of cash from our husbands. Our evening meetings evolved from sweaty love making sessions to conversations over mugs of coffee on what we would do when we escaped.

We decided to move to California. We decided not to take our babies with us. We decided to never divorce our husbands. We decided to grow old together. I decided that she was the absolute love my life.

The morning before we were supposed to escape, Marina walked through my door with a big dark bruise splattered against her face.

“It’s nothing,” she exclaimed when I threatened to call the cops on her husband. But it was everything in my small world. I found that out after Marina finally confessed to me why her husband attacked her.

Marina’s husband was a drunk. And like most drunks, he had a very vile temper. So when he discovered a stash of cash tucked away in his wife’s books, he assumed she stole from him (which technically she did) and he slapped her around their tiny apartment until she told him what the money was for. We were found out. I knew by the end of the day our fantasy of a life together would be demolished and our lives would collapse. All of our glorious planning ruined by a drunken mechanic with a GED.

After Marina left I crawled into a ball on my couch and imagined all the horrible possibilities that could occur if Marina’s husband told Sam of our escape plan. I rolled myself into the closest I could be to invisible and sobbed. Marina: ruiner of my life, key to my joy. Sam was going to hate my guts. I thought of the past two years and the few flickers of his hatred that arose from me abandoning him with Marina previously. I knew this time he would never take me back. As the day progressed through my window, I kept expecting Sam to barge through the front door and throw me out of our home. But it never happened. He came home and everything was calm. He saw me rolled up on the couch with no dinner ready and our child still in its diaper from this morning and thought I was simply being difficult.

The next morning I discovered why my life remained in its standard mediocre state. I turned on my television to see Marina’s face plastered on the news. My Marina, my lover, my obsession, was a murderer. When Marina left my home, she snapped. She went back to her cramped apartment and waited for her husband, with a shiny new knife in her hand. According to one of her neighbors, her husband barely got through the door before she charged at him and stabbed and stabbed and slashed him into death. When the police got to the scene, a blood-soaked Marina was in the woods near her apartment building letting a stray dog lick her gory hands.

She went to jail and I remained in mine. Marina never revealed our plans during the trial. I would glean the news religiously for some lesbian motive to appear on the screen. But one never did. I am still not certain if I should feel relieved or hurt. She pleads insanity. Everyone agreed she wasn’t sane. Everyone sympathized that her husband was a drunk and that they were poor and knew that she was wild.

My escape stash became useless. At first, I continued contributing to my escape, despite Marina. But then I realized I didn’t have any reason to leave other than to be with her. Her arrest revealed that my love for her was the only interesting thing about me.

Without her, I was just another dissatisfied housewife with no good reason to leave their husband.

I never visit her. I don’t think she would want to see me. I really think she would still want me to view her as the perfect creature I fell in love with. In a way, she still is. I don’t have the guts to do what she did. She knew it too. She knew I was inferior. I only wish I was there to hold after she killed him. Or even run away with her right then and not care if we got caught because we were together. I think what I’m most angry about is the fact that she never gave me the option to help her. She just assumed that she needed to take on the world by herself. All that planning we did for nothing.

After Sam found out what Marina did, he looked at me different. Like, I might do the same to him. I want to. I would. But what good would that do? Sometimes when I’m lonely, I smell a sweater she lent me. I press my nose against it and it’s like she’s there, holding me and laughing. But after a while, I always get angry. I should probably wash that sweater. Maybe then she’ll stop haunting me. Marina, terror of my dreams.

Used with permission from the author, copyright (c) Camille Corbett 2020.


Camille Corbett

Camille Corbett

Camille Corbett is an Atlanta native and a queer-identifying, first-generation Jamaican. She is a graduate of University of Alabama and a Fulbright Scholar. She was raised by her Jamaican immigrant mother and her Southern father who is a former NFL player turned motivational speaker. She has traveled to over 18 countries and speaks 3 languages (English, Spanish, Turkish). As part of her Fulbright Grant, she spent a year teaching English at Abant Izzet University in a small town in Turkey. She is currently staffed on the upcoming Jamie Foxx series, DAD, STOP EMBARASSING ME, for Netflix, and has recently written episodes for the Quibi series BREF. Previously, she was the TA for the NBC fellowship Writers on the Verge and Writers' Assistant on ON MY BLOCK. Prior to that, she was a Researcher for THE HOTEL THERESA film; BORN TO FAIL, a TV show in development at Gunpowder & Sky; and THE TERROR for AMC. She’s currently a student at Groundlings and UCB. You can find her tweeting about her exes @TheWittyGirl.