In Mañana Means Heaven, acclaimed writer Tim Z. Hernandez paints a richly textured and nuanced portrait of Bea Franco, the real woman behind Jack Kerouac’s fictionalized Terry, the so-called “Mexican
Girl” from Kerouac’s iconic novel, On the Road.
Released August 29 by the University of Arizona Press,
Hernandez’s novel has already earned high praise from critics. The Associated Press called it “a
graceful and melancholy tale” and Booklist
called it “entirely fascinating.” The Los
Angeles Review of Books said Mañana
Means Heaven “is well researched and exceptionally executed and allows Bea
Franco to soar with grace beyond Kerouac’s opening chapter of On the Road.”
Today, on La Bloga, we’re
featuring an excerpt from the novel as part of Hernandez’s blog tour. To see more
from his tour, feel free to stop by the other participating sites:
SEP 16: STEPHANIE NIKOLOPOULOS BLOG
SEP 17: THE DAILY BEAT
SEP 19: THE BIG IDEA
SEP 20: THE DAN O’BRIEN PROJECT
SEP 21: IMPRESSIONS OF A READER
Excerpt from
Mañana Means Heaven
Wednesday, October 22, 1947
PARASITE
The Fresno County Coroner confirmed that
because nowhere on the body were there bruises or scrapes the only logical
explanation was suicide. A common occurrence among braceros. Naturally. They
missed their families back home. Depression was inevitable. Fear was constant.
The food too bland. A bottle of whiskey was found half emptied nearby. And for
Xixto María Martínez, all the signs were there. On this very day his contract
was up. As for the brief poem found on his person, the paper offered no
explanation, except to say: Mr. Martínez had a way with words. It was imminent
now. Xixto dying the way he died was only a suggestion.
The workers knew this, and thought hard about it as they bent
over their vines that morning in a solemn daze. The fields were gray with dew,
and each grape wore a thin veil of film so that its sheen was hidden. So quiet
were the rows and the shuffling of feet that swallowtails perched themselves on
the branches of the vines and plucked the smaller tart grapes at will. And as
if things weren’t bad enough, a cold snap was creeping in over Devil’s Ridge
from the north and settling down into the valley, sure to cripple whatever bits
of fruit were still unharvested.
That morning, Bea’s hands moved faster than anybody else’s. Box
after box was filled and carted off to be weighed and counted, and within
seconds she was right back where she’d left off, on the very same tendril,
making sure the job was done right and that every last grape was accounted for.
She passed other workers as if they were standing still, and for the most part
they were. It seemed everyone was busy scratching their heads, worried whether
today was the day it would all go down.
They eyed Jack suspiciously, wondering if the rumors were true. A
lechuza they called him. A white owl in their midst. For the most part
he got good at ignoring their accusatory glares. But off and on he’d feel
something, a pebble, smash against his neck. He shrugged it off and kept his
hands moving. Meanwhile, Bea kept saying the words, New York, in her mind.
And while her feet were sunk firm in the wet soil, the rest of her may as well
have been in a subway, barreling down the spine of Manhattan, a purse slung
over her shoulder and both kids clinging to her arms. She thought about what
her brother had said. “Five days,” she mumbled to herself, “just five more
little days.” She passed the time picturing their new life, imagining the big
smell of New York City, and watching the kids monkey around the playground of
some brick schoolyard tucked between high-rise buildings. She lifted another
box of grapes and hauled them off to be counted.
Meanwhile, Jack trailed one row back, cutting away viciously with
his curved knife all the knots and tendrils that cradled the grapes deep in
their clutches. His gaze was stern and removed, and his pink face glowed in the
cold. Little Albert nipped at his heels, raking out whatever clusters went
overlooked and plopping them down into Jack’s box like the handy assistant that
he was. Each time he did this he looked to Jack for approval, or a smile,
anything to erase the worrisome look on his face. Jack watched the way the boy
handled his knife and shot around the whole field effortlessly, offering a hand
here and there, calling out to the other workers in Spanish, whistling the whole
way. He was a little man doing big man’s work, and Jack had taken notice that
the fields had an army of these little men workers, boys, whose small hands
were crucial to the whole operation. Every last one of them wore a defeated
mask. And if you looked at them from a distance, he reasoned, you’d think they
were full-grown men by the way they stood, hips squared and shoulders back. The
only way you could tell the boys apart from the adults was at lunchtime, when
they’d all gather around a hole in the dirt to shoot marbles.
Jack observed this and shook his head, remembering a line from one
of the great scribes of this territory, William Saroyan, who said it best about
such children of the valley: I was a little afraid of him; not the boy
himself, but of what he seemed to be, the victim of the world.
[From Mañana Means Heaven by Tim Z. Hernandez © 2013 Tim Z. Hernandez. Reprinted by permission of the University of Arizona Press. http://www.uapress.arizona.edu/Books/bid2426.htm.]
[From Mañana Means Heaven by Tim Z. Hernandez © 2013 Tim Z. Hernandez. Reprinted by permission of the University of Arizona Press. http://www.uapress.arizona.edu/Books/bid2426.htm.]
5 comments:
Is this fan fiction?
Yes, this is fan fiction and Hernandez makes that loud and clear. According to editorial reviews it's beautifully written and captivating, but it needs our reviews - $16.00 at Amazon. --Just to share, a friend, Albert Gomez from Corpus Christi, Tx., told my husband and I a story, "A man fishing off the pier has two buckets of crabs: one with a lid and one without. Another man walks up on the pier to fish and asks, "why do you have one bucket covered and not the other?" The first man answers, "because this one with the lid are Anglo crabs that constantly help one another escape; in this bucket without the lid are Mexican crabs; no worries about them, they just remain in the bucket."
But that's the past, and the help from La Bloga is changing our future; we're helping one another to escape from the bucket.
Yes, it is a beautiful and powerful novel. I wouldn't call it "fan fiction" because fan fiction usually connotes amateur and unpaid writing from a fan who borrows characters from other sources. Tim is a professional writer who has won many awards. I would simply call it literary fiction, but in the end these labels don't really matter because it's the work that counts. Thanks!
Thanks for the sneak-peek, Daniel. My book list is growing so quickly!
Daniel, literary fiction, no doubt! But in regards to Anonymous above who asked if it is fan fiction, how would you directly answer that? Manana Means Heaven is a form of fan fic, (until a new label, name, genre is contrived). But I was looking at the positive side. Fan fiction is building a story around a character who was originally in a different author's narrative. And with permission from the original author, it seems Hernandez created an enticing read, which not only boosts Hernandez' reputation as a great writer but also benefits the reputation of the author who first created the character - - readers will purchase and enjoy Hernandez' book and quite possibly purchase the book which first featured that character. A type of win - win scenario which could not happen in a straight literary fiction novel. Many other great writers, icons, have written fan fic, three are Mark Twain, Shakespeare, Bronte, and they were paid. Just imagine if an author like Hernandez approaches you with the offer of building a narrative around a character in your novel who he envisions would fit in his. Judging from the author's previous works, that would be a great compliment. In whichever categories book retailers place his latest work, I believe that Hernandez can "uplift" the fan fiction labeling/ reputation by showing the literary world how it's done in good taste, and my aim is to buy it, read it, and write a review.
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