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Mexican Americans Fiction

"National Book Critics Circle Lifetime Achievement honoree Rolando Hinojosa returns to Klail City in Belken County along the Texas-Mexico border to chronicle the lives of its residents. There's friendship, "which can all of a sudden pop up at any time," and death, which happens just as frequently. The friendship between cousins Rafe Buenrostro and Jehu Malacara continues through war and peace. After returning from Korea, Rafe like so many Mexican Americans is advised to use the GI Bill to learn a trade, like building fishing boats. He and Jehu opt to attend the University of Texas. They get by working in the library and writing papers for other students. When a teaching assistantship becomes available, Rafe loses it because the secretary couldn't locate him, confirming the fact that some Mexican Americans are sellouts. The sun rises and sets in Klail City. People fall in love, wrangle with God and sell their souls to the devil. Frequently compared to William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha and Gabriel García Marquez's Macondo, Rolando Hinojosa's fictional Klail City brings to life the Texas-Mexico border area in the twentieth century."--Page 4 of cover.

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