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2009

5.5 x 8.5 in.
256 pp.

ISBN: 978-0-292-71918-7
$50.00, hardcover, no dust jacket
33% website discount: $33.50

ISBN: 978-0-292-71958-3
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 
 
     

Golondrina, why did you leave me?
A Novel

By Bárbara Renaud González

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"Like celebrated Mexican American authors that proceed her, Renaud González accomplishes the task not only of fleshing out her theme in unique, melodious, and astounding ways that confound genres, but she triumphs even more so due to her deft, exhilarating, and virtuosic command of written language."

—Irma Mayorga, Assistant Professor of Theatre, Florida State University

The golondrina is a small and undistinguished swallow. But in Spanish, the word has evoked a thousand poems and songs dedicated to the migrant's departure and hoped-for return. As such, the migrant becomes like the swallow, a dream-seeker whose real home is nowhere, everywhere, and especially in the heart of the person left behind.

The swallow in this story is Amada García, a young Mexican woman in a brutal marriage, who makes a heart-wrenching decision—to leave her young daughter behind in Mexico as she escapes to el Norte searching for love, which she believes must reside in the country of freedom. However, she falls in love with the man who brings her to the Texas border, and the memories of those three passionate days forever sustain and define her journey in Texas. She meets and marries Lázaro Mistral, who is on his own journey—to reclaim the land his family lost after the U.S.-Mexican War. Their opposing narratives about love and war become the legacy of their first-born daughter, Lucero, who must reconcile their stories into her struggle to find "home," as her mother, Amada, finally discovers the country where love beats its infinite wings.

Bárbara Renaud González, a native-born Tejana and acclaimed journalist, has written a lyrical story of land, love, and loss, bringing us the first novel of a working-class Tejano family set in the cruelest beauty of the Texas panhandle. Her story exposes the brutality, tragedy, and hope of her homeland and helps to fill a dearth of scholarly and literary works on Mexican and Mexican American women in post–World War II Texas.

Bárbara Renaud González is an award-winning writer, independent journalist, and activist who lives in San Antonio.

Chicana Matters Series
Deena J. González and Antonia Castañeda, editors

 Of Related Interest Cedeño, Amá, Your Story Is Mine
Murguía, The Medicine of Memory
Pérez, Forgetting the Alamo, Or, Blood Memory
Rebolledo, The Chronicles of Panchita Villa and Other Guerrilleras
 Offsite Author's website
Author's Blog
Interview with the author on NPR's Latino USA

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