Sergio Troncoso's Blog: Chico Lingo, by Sergio Troncoso - Posts Tagged "immigrant"
LargeHearted Boy: Playlist for A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant's Son

"I listen to music to think and to find inspiration from its emotions, energies, and rhythms. Music is a fount of creativity for me. When I’m deep in a story in my head and I’m trying to work out a character or plot line, or I’m thinking of the many layers of a story, I listen to music. It’s a way of letting go, of immersing myself in something new that is not writing. My favorite music always inspires me to find that solution that previously bedeviled me, or it loosens something stuck in my brain and I often have an aha! moment where I see what I previously did not see. All of this happens when I lose myself in sound."
http://www.largeheartedboy.com/blog/archive/2019/11/sergio_troncoso.html
Published on November 20, 2019 14:04
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Tags:
el-paso, el-paso-texas, fiction, immigrant, immigrants, largehearted-boy, music, music-and-literature, sergio-troncoso, short-stories
Literal Magazine Review: A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant's Son
Review in
Literal Magazine
of
A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant’s Son
(Cinco Puntos Press):
“The short stories in A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant’s Son, his latest book, are all linked: many share the same characters, and some—in a neat narrative trick—even cause one to entirely reevaluate a previous story. Generally, they move from stark, spare realism in the first few stories, to lush dystopian surrealism in the last few. Although many stories take place far from the Rio Grande, this is a robust, proud exploration of what it is like to be (on what one character calls) “the edge of the edge of the United States”: to be the child of immigrants, to be straddling two worlds—lines between love and sex, past and future, civilization and brutality, life and death.”
http://literalmagazine.com/a-peculiar-kind-of-immigrants-son-review/

“The short stories in A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant’s Son, his latest book, are all linked: many share the same characters, and some—in a neat narrative trick—even cause one to entirely reevaluate a previous story. Generally, they move from stark, spare realism in the first few stories, to lush dystopian surrealism in the last few. Although many stories take place far from the Rio Grande, this is a robust, proud exploration of what it is like to be (on what one character calls) “the edge of the edge of the United States”: to be the child of immigrants, to be straddling two worlds—lines between love and sex, past and future, civilization and brutality, life and death.”
http://literalmagazine.com/a-peculiar-kind-of-immigrants-son-review/
Published on February 06, 2020 11:54
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Tags:
chicana, chicano, immigrant, immigrants, latinx, literary, mexican-american, philosophy-in-literature, short-stories, stories
Chico Lingo, by Sergio Troncoso
Sergio Troncoso is the author of A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant's Son, The Last Tortilla and Other Stories, Crossing Borders: Personal Essays, and the novels The Nature of Truth and From This Wicked Pat
Sergio Troncoso is the author of A Peculiar Kind of Immigrant's Son, The Last Tortilla and Other Stories, Crossing Borders: Personal Essays, and the novels The Nature of Truth and From This Wicked Patch of Dust. For many years, he has taught at the Yale Writers' Workshop in New Haven, Connecticut.
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