Tag: la cultura salvadoreña

  • Poet Alexandra Regalado: Life Seen Through the Bulletproof Glass

    Poet Alexandra Regalado: Life Seen Through the Bulletproof Glass

    When I attended the Associated Writing Programs conference in Tampa, Florida in March, I sought out Latinos, because the last time I went to the conference, about ten years ago, AWP truly deserved the nickname that people of color gave it: “All White People.” It’s still a majority white, but I found the Latina/o/x writers…

  • El Testimonio: César Vallejo y la búsqueda de mis raíces

    El Testimonio: César Vallejo y la búsqueda de mis raíces

    Every once in a while I do a podcast in Spanish, and talk about what it means to be Latino today, in the U.S. Porque, para mí, el español siempre fue, y es, el idioma de amor–ese amor de la niñez, cuando las mujeres de la casa en mi pueblo natal, San Francisco, CA–las tías,…

  • The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 4

    The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 4

    I forgot to mention, the 1967 Mustang plays a big role in this novel. It’s practically another character. It’s the summer of 1978, a few months after Tony cut his wrist. The whole family knows about it, but, unlike other families who try to avoid such difficulties and pretend nothing’s wrong, the women of the…

  • The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 3

    The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 3

    In this part of the novel, you get a real taste of what some of us call “internalized racism.” This is when a non-white person starts to believe, on a subconscious level, what the racist world says of him: in young, sixteen-year-old’s Tony case, he’s seen as a mongrel, the mix of a white man…

  • Audio Book: The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 1

    Audio Book: The Holy Spirit of My Uncle’s Cojones, Part 1

    In the first pages of the novel, we meet Antonio “Tony” McCaugh Villalobos, an Appalachian-Salvadoran writer living in Knoxville, Tennessee, and far from his Salvadoran roots. He’s just published his first book, a literary novel, which means he didn’t get any money for it. He’s trying to write his next novel, but has writer’s block.…