Inside Amigoland - The Texas Observer

Texasobserver

Inside Amigoland - The Texas Observer"


Play all audios:

Loading...

_Oscar Casares’s short story collection _Brownsville_ (Back Bay, 2003) was an instant hit with critics and readers, establishing Casares as a writer to watch. His follow-up, _Amigoland_


(Little Brown, 2009),w was released in August and met with similar critical acclaim. In the novel, Don Fidencio, a ninety-one-year-old in the eponymous nursing home, has suffered a stroke,


and shuns other residents. With incredible determination, Don Fidencio—with the help of his younger brother Don Celestino and his girlfriend Socorro—pursues the kernel of memory that haunts


him: the legend of the abduction of his grandfather as a child, by Indians who abandoned him on the American side of the border. Together the three embark on an unauthorized trip to Linares,


Mexico, where the family originated. In Casares’s compassionate fictional world, time, place, and memory can be forgiving—with a bit of luck. Casares spoke with Anis Shivani by phone from


his office at the University of Texas at Austin. To hear a recording of the full interview, click play below._ Download mp3 OBSERVER: Brownsville_ seems so powerful now, because although


ethnicity is part of it, it’s stripped of a political agenda. _ CASARES: When you live on the border, where Mexican-Americans are 95 to 96 percent of the population, questions of ethnicity


and race aren’t what they are in other parts of the country. The questions become more about class, for instance. __ _So you didn’t feel the need to explain things, which often turns into


exoticism? _ No, you’re coming into my world. I’m going to do my job to acclimate you to this new environment, but you have to do your part. If you’re observant and curious, you don’t ask


too many questions but just observe and note the differences. By not talking about ethnicity, the stories get beyond that issue and suddenly you’re looking at these people as people and not


as an ethnic group. __ _When you were younger, did you want to write against the politically-charged protest literature of the Chicano Movement writers of the 1960s and 1970s, like Raymond


Barrio, Ricardo Sánchez and Richard Vásquez? _ I was already in my thirties before I started writing. It wasn’t until I moved from the border that I started hearing terms like


Mexican-American and Chicano and Hispanic and all these labels that each came with its own baggage. _Brownsville_ gave me a safe place to get away from talking about the differences and more


about the similarities. __ _What was the genesis of _Amigoland_? Did it take a while to understand your characters? _ It took me a long time to understand my characters. I must have written


three or four hundred pages before I had a sense of who they were. The genesis of the novel has to do with the family legend I heard growing up. The story my uncle used to tell was that my


great-great-grandfather was living in Northern Mexico, and Indians had attacked this festival he was attending as a child. They took several other children, and the Mexican army was behind


them, and when they got to the border, which had just become the United States, they kept going north and they dropped one child, and that child was our great-great-grandfather. My father


claimed it never happened, my uncle was making it up. As I got deeper I realized I wanted to write more about this competing mythology of where we came from. I knew this was going to be told


by these two older men, and slowly they took shape and became who they are now. I made a tough decision to lose a lot of what I had written to gain clarity. Brownsville _is often about


young people, while _Amigoland_ is about people at the end of their lives. _ I grew up in a house with much older parents. My Dad was fifty when I was born, my mother was forty-two. In 2004,


when my father was ninety-two, he broke his hip and ended up in a nursing home and I found myself helping out whenever I could. My real life had intersected with my fictional narrative. I


didn’t want to compromise the story by making it overly sentimental and it took longer because of that. __ _Don Fidencio has forgotten much, but remembers the most important thing. _ A lot


of times memory loss happens with incidents closer to the present and the memories that stay with us are the ones that happen to us in formative years. Don Fidencio has a close bond with the


grandfather, who is more like a father figure. __ _In both your books the border is blurred. _ I teach a class on the border and we write personal essays. The border is not static. There’s


tension because of the wall and the drug war, but in the stories and the novel the notion that you suddenly cross the border into another world and leave everything behind doesn’t exist.


People have a wedding in Brownsville and the reception in Matamoros because it’s less expensive. Socorro, the girlfriend of Don Celestino, comes back and forth practically every day. That


was what I knew growing up. I was down there recently and it was the first time I needed a passport to get back. It’s changed dramatically—the number of border patrol agents, and the various


checkpoints that didn’t exist. It feels like a military state. _So for younger people it might be a sharper line. _ I wrote a story for _Texas Monthly_ about the high school soccer team.


Before the school bus leaves Brownsville they bring on the sniffing dogs. Then the bus stops at the checkpoint and the inspector walks through. I played sports when I was a kid and I don’t


remember drug dogs coming on. __ _The stereotypical journey of the Mexican is from the south to the north. _Amigoland_ reverses it and the main characters head south. _ They do it illegally.


They don’t have any papers, only Socorro, a Mexican citizen… __ _An illegal border crossing in the other direction… _ It does put that whole notion on its head. Don Fidencio in his mind


owns the mythology, so the question of the crossing matters less to him. __ _You question the illegality of human beings, how they became abstractions, not people. _ In _Brownsville_ I tried


not to let it influence the writing but just to get the story down. Then the climate changed greatly. The southern border intensified. The immigration marches took place. As with my father,


it became one of the challenges. To write about it honestly but not let it influence too much of the writing. __ _Don Fidencio gives obnoxious names to people at the nursing home. Why can’t


he empathize, as he does with his ancient relative in Mexico? _ His mild stroke has impaired his memory so the names, though cruel, are a way of coping. As for the empathy at the end of the


novel, there’s also a self-serving agenda to make more out of this trip, which seems on very shaky ground. __ _Once you have finished the book, it seems impossible to conceive of a


different ending for Don Fidencio once he reaches Linares. Did you ever think of one? _ Today I was cleaning up my office. I had put up all these Post-It notes to have some visual sense of


how the novel was evolving. The notes seemed utterly foreign to me. Again, struggling with my father’s condition, as much as I wanted that not to influence me… Don Celestino is struggling


with intimacy all along and the trip forces things to the surface, so that was what I wanted to produce for Don Celestino and Soccoro. With Don Fidencio I didn’t quite know where this was


going to end but I knew whatever would happen, it would be on his own terms. __ _Don Fidencio has a greater need to be liberated… _ As the novel opens he has nothing— __ _No control… _ None


whatsoever. Though Don Celestino’s world is shutting down, he’s still not at the edge of what Don Fidencio is experiencing. At the beginning it looks pretty bleak for him. __ _And he’s


stubborn. The machismo is also present in _Brownsville_. In Don Fidencio’s case it’s endearing. _ This is based on the older men I grew up around, the pride they took in their work, how they


took care of their families. In spite of all their flaws this was part of their character, the freedom they had—sometimes too much freedom that got them in trouble. __ _Symbols often carry


the stories in _Brownsville_. The monkey’s head, the hammer, the bowling bowl. In _Amigoland_ the slow passage of time creates the same visceral connection to reality. _ Those objects don’t


mean anything at the beginning. The monkey’s head is weird, but it only means something when you understand the character. The novel covers a much larger span of time, uses multiple points


of view, but I challenged myself not to have anything extraneous. __ _Did you experience Linares as you were writing the book? _ I did it on the front end, I spoke to the state archivist of


León, found quite a bit of documentation to back up the story, but I wasn’t writing a historical novel or travelogue and everything had to have a reason for being.__ _Anis Shivani is a


fiction writer, poet, and critic in Houston. His short fiction collection, _Anatolia and Other Stories_, is being published in October 2009 by Black Lawrence Press/Dzanc Books._


Trending News

Drivers urged to pay car tax ahead of major ved changes next month

The standard rate will increase by £10 for most cars which were first registered on or after April 1, 2017. For cars reg...

Expressive drawing: a practical guide to freeing the artist within

BOOK DESCRIPTION BUY THIS BOOK! * Amazon * BARNES & NOBLE _Pricing varies by retailer_ The many people who long to d...

France: new president macron is a ‘zombie catholic’

Newly-elected President Emmanuel Macron, according to one of his biographers, embodies a new phenomenon in France known ...

Page Not Found

很抱歉,你所访问的页面已不存在了。 如有疑问,请电邮[email protected] 你仍然可选择浏览首页或以下栏目内容 : 新闻 生活 娱乐 财经 体育 视频 播客 新报业媒体有限公司版权所有(公司登记号:202120748H)...

Closer look: venison sandwiches; allergies; and more

Closer Look with Rose Scott November 4, 2016 Friday on “Closer Look with Rose Scott and Jim Burress”: * 0:00: Atlanta Jo...

Latests News

Inside Amigoland - The Texas Observer

_Oscar Casares’s short story collection _Brownsville_ (Back Bay, 2003) was an instant hit with critics and readers, esta...

The persistent ring of m87* confirms predictions

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe The first image of a black hole shadow graced the front pages of newspa...

Scottish budget 2021: what it means for young people — scottish national party

The Finance Secretary, Kate Forbes, has set out the Scottish Government’s budget plans for the year ahead. It’s a Budget...

Cytokines in clinical cancer immunotherapy

ABSTRACT Cytokines are soluble proteins that mediate cell-to-cell communication. Based on the discovery of the potent an...

Factors associated with the melanoma diagnostic interval in ontario, canada: a population-based study

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND Protracted times to diagnosis of cancer can lead to increased patient anxiety, and in some cases, di...

Top