Who’s Next? Leaders Learn As They Grow
Review: Mickey Ibarra and María Pérez-Brown, eds. Latino Leaders Speak, Vol. II. Personal Stories of Struggle and Triumph. Houston: Arte Publico Press, 2025. ISBN: 979-8-89375-025-6
Michael Sedano
What do you get when people on upward career trajectories gather to listen to a speech given by someone of notable achievement talk about themselves and how they got to the top? If you do so regularly you get a collection of speeches like Mickey Ibarra and María Pérez-Brown’s collection, Latino Leaders Speak, from Houston’s Arte Publico Press (link).
The collection of twenty-five speeches aren’t oratory but communal, comfortable discourse of an achiever among peers, gente who come from ranks of elected officials, policy makers, corporate executives, opinion leaders, community activists, industry experts, and political insiders.
The collection will be useful to young adult readers on the verge of making career decisions. It’s not that any kid aims to become president of San Diego State University, or Governor of New Mexico, or a White House Deputy Chief of Staff, but somewhere between ninth grade and the first job out of college, those people found the right way to get there.
A collection of talks like this, successful raza at pinnacles of authority and comfort, give readers insight into lifelong habits and career strategies to emulate or reject. Some of the speakers come from farm labor, others from middle-class comfort. Common consejos and observations emerge from the readings: leaders like these found within themselves the ganas to take risks, depend on mentors, didn’t forget familia and where they’re from. The preacher calls out the vital importance of public speaking to a leader’s abilities, a skill each of the other keynoters should have credited as well.
This collection emerges from collaboration between Arte Publico and Latino Leaders Network (link) https://www.latinoleadersnetwork.org The 20 year-old nonprofit dedicates itself to networking among diverse business professionals in various cities via luncheons, awards, and other networking events. Latino Leaders Speak comes from luncheons between 2009 and 2024.
Useful as this collection appears, it’s flawed by the absence of women. Among the 25 luncheon honorees who make it into the book, only three women make the list. Theirs are among the most effective readings in the collection, more’s the loss.
Coincidentally, the first essay comes from California gubernatorial candidate Xavier Becerra (the collection is alphabetized), whose 2009 speech pays tribute to the first Chicano elected to Congress, Esteban Torres. The speech establishes Becerra’s ethos as a respectful, humble, loving father who cares about healthcare and immigrants. Not a bad campaign ad for the rising-in-the-polls Chicano.
While the book’s emphasis is political and elected leadership, there’s also Raiders coach Tom Flores, musician Emilio Estefan, actors Tony Plana and Edward James Olmos, and community activist Rev. Luis Cortés, Jr.
You can order copies from Libromobile, your local indie bookseller, or Arte Publico. Volume I in the series is free via Latino Leaders Network's website.
Scenes From The 2026 Los Angeles Times Festival of Books
Surface rail from Pasadena to the University of Southern California makes travel a breeze. At 35 cents for seniors, it's also a travel bargain that can't be beat. Those centavitos we save on transportation come in handy when a vendor charges siete bolas for an agua fresca.
The Times runs a razacentric section it calls De Los (link). It's the festival's first stage and book display area, just where the crowd enters campus. It's a prime spot for foot traffic and that's what's happening.
A mariachi group takes the stage. These are high school students from South Gate, a working class community. Little kids filter out from the audience to sit at the foot of the stage to soak in the cultura from musicians not too much older than the attentive chamacos. It's heart-warming and invigorating seeing these young people in fancy traje I hope the school provides, playing and singing solos. Ajua!
I'm with Thelma Reyna and as we enter the bookseller area we spot Reyna Grande's new book. Thelma tells me she's seen Grande's social media spots where Reyna is sewing a glorious jacket mirroring the book jacket. "Isn't that Reyna?" Thelma says. Sure enough, the brilliant yellow jacket and matching hat can't be missed.
Or, maybe not. Reyna Grande stands back from the display where readers stare at the yellow flowered cover of Migrant Heart (link), unaware the woman standing behind them is the author wearing her textile rendering of la portada of Migrant Heart, Essays About Things I Can't Forget.
I imagine it's a typical occurrence at book fairs, authors mixing with readers free from trappings of celebrity.






















