What a pleasure to have writer, Luis Alberto Urrea in the La Bloga house today! Urrea is the author of 13 books of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry. He has been a Pulitzer Prize Finalist (non-fiction), and an American Book Award and Lannan Literary Award recipient.
Some of his best selling books are, The Hummingbird’s Daughter, (historical fiction), and The Devil’s Highway. In
2009, our own La Bloga writer, Olga Echeverría reviewed his book, Into the Beautiful North, another popular novel. His non-fiction
works, Across the Wire: Life and Hard Times on the Mexican Border
and Nobody’s Son: Notes from an American Life are poignant and gritty accounts of his coming-of-age in Tijuana. Urrea has also been an important voice against the banning of books and of Mexican American studies in Arizona. Here is a link to his poem "Hymn to Vatos Who Will Never Be in a Poem" that was read during the LibroTraficante caravan, a protest march that took place in 2012 to take banned books back to Arizona. (Click here to listen to the poem.)
Urrea’s
latest book is a collection of poetry entitled, The Tijuana Book of the Dead. He is currently on a book tour, but
was kind enough to take time for an interview. I also want to give a "shout-out" to artist/photographer Art Meza (on twitter, find him at @Chicano-Soul) whose photo is on the cover of the book!
Amelia Montes: Gracias, Luis, for taking time out from your book tour. How did this poetry collection, The Tijuana Book of the Dead come about?
Luis Alberto Urrea: The Tijuana Book of the Dead was about
six books over the last ten years. My
life kept changing too fast for the poems to hold. But then, the racist cabrones in the Tucson
Unified School District started their bannings.
Oh, excuse me, their “book boxing.”
Sorry. My rage boiled over and I
got all Chicano. It turned into
1971! Ha ha. The book was a
cry from the heart. An explosion. The other million poems from the interim are
moving into the new and selected collection I’m preparing.
Amelia Montes:
How is this book of poetry different from Vatos or Ghost Sickness: A Book of Poems?
Luis Alberto Urrea:
“Vatos” is in it. I never meant
for “Vatos” to be a book. It was always
meant as the prayer at the end of the new book.
Remember, the poem is called, “Hymn to Vatos Who Will Never be in a
Poem.” If I had done that book, it would
have been called “Hymn.” Better that I
didn’t! Vatos was so much more
marketable.
As far as Ghost Sickness . . . one hopes the work
evolves. New voices, new melodies, new
milieus.
Amelia Montes:
You are most known for your fiction and non-fiction. How does the writing of poetry sustain you
differently from the other genres, or is it connected?
Luis Alberto Urrea: Poetry is the wellspring. The secret source. I have often said that The Hummingbird’s Daughter is really 25,000 haiku in a row. It is
more of a ritual for me, and you probably know all writing is a ritual for
me. Not a career at all.
Amelia Montes:
Is there anything else you’d like to tell “La Bloga” readers?
Luis Alberto Urrea: I
just want to thank the “La Bloga” community for keeping our beautiful Raza
vibrant and brilliant. Our song, our
story, our thought, our art, our soul, WEAR THE
CABRONES DOWN.
Amelia Montes: Gracias Luis! Check out Luis Alberto Urrea's website for details regarding his book tour, and his latest publications! (Click Here!)
Awesome! I am so excited about this new poetry collection. I've been waiting for the next Luis Urrea poetry book since Ghost Sickness, which helped me so much with my own ghost sickness. I love Luis Urrea. Thanks, Amelia, for this book release news and for the Sunday morning entrevista.
ReplyDeleteGracias, Olga! It was a pleasure to have Luis with us today. I loved your review and interview with Luis in 2009 for _Into the Beautiful North_. _Ghost Sickness_ rocks as well! Abrazos to all and I hope many will enjoy reading his new collection of poetry!
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to read Luis Urrea's new poetry collection. I love his work... reading his words is like a healing balm to the soul. I rejoice in everything he's ever written. Bravo, Luis.
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