By Daniel Chacón
- Paperback: 272 pages
- Publisher: Piñata Books
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 1558858407
- ISBN-13: 978-1558858404
"Do you know what a stereotype you are?" Jessica asks
her son. "You're the existential Chicano." Fourteen-year-old Victor
has just been released from the hospital; his chest is wrapped in bandages and
his arm is in a sling. He has barely survived being shot, and his mother
accuses him of being a cholo, something he denies.
She's not the only adult that thinks he's a gangbanger. His
sociology teacher once sent him to a teach-in on gang violence. Victor's
philosophy is that everyone is racist. "They see a brown kid, they see a
banger." Even other kids think he's in a gang, maybe because of the
clothes he wears. The truth is, he loves death (metal, that is), reading books,
drawing, the cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz and the Showtime series Weeds. He
likes school and cooking. He knows what a double negative is!
But he can't convince his mom that he's not in a gang. And in
spite of a genius girlfriend and an art teacher who mentors and encourages him
to apply to art schools, Victor can't seem to overcome society's expectations
for him.
In
this compelling novel, renowned Chicano writer Daniel Chacon once again
explores art, death, ethnicity and racism. Are Chicanos meant for meth houses
instead of art schools? Are talented Chicanos never destined to study in Paris?
Daniel Chacón is author
of five books of fiction and editor of A Jury of Trees, the posthumous poems of
Andrés Montoya. He is co-editor with Mimi Gladstein of The Last Supper of
Chicano Heroes: The Selected Works of José Antonio Burciaga.
Chacon is recipient of
the Pen Oakland Fiction Award, a Chris Isherwood Foundation Grant, the Hudson
Book Prize, and The American book Award.
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