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Author Sergio Troncoso reads from CROSSING BORDERS at New Jersey City University

Troncoso will read from and promote his forthcoming work at New Jersey City University in Jersey City, NJ

What
When Nov 01, 2011
from 07:00 PM to 09:00 PM
Where Hepburn Hall 202 (The Gothic Lounge), New Jersey City University, 2039 Kennedy Blvd, Jersey City, NJ 07305-1597
Contact Name
Contact Phone 201-200-3548
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 Sergio Troncoso will read from his forthcoming work, Crossing Borders: Personal Essays and From This Wicked Patch of Dust—both which will be published in September 2011—on November 1st, 7:00 p.m., at New Jersey City University in Hepburn Hall 202 (The Gothic Lounge).

For more information, click here.


Sergio Troncoso is the author of The Nature of Truth (Northwestern University Press, 2003) and The Last Tortilla and Other Stories (University of Arizona Press, 1999), which won the Premio Aztlán and the Southwest Book Award. His newest book, Crossing Borders: Personal Essays is forthcoming from Arte Público Press. He received his undergraduate degree from Harvard College and two graduate degrees, in international relations and philosophy, from Yale University. He won a Fulbright scholarship to Mexico and was inducted into the Hispanic Scholarship Fund's Alumni Hall of Fame. He lives and works in New York City.

About Crossing Borders:

 

Crossing Borders“On good days I feel I am a bridge. On bad days I just feel alone,” Sergio Troncoso writes in this riveting collection of sixteen personal essays in which he seeks to connect the humanity of his Mexican family to people he meets on the East Coast, including his wife’s Jewish kin. Raised steps from the Mexican border in El Paso, Texas, Troncoso crossed what seemed an even more imposing border when he left home to attend Harvard College.

Initially, “outsider status” was thrust upon him; later, he adopted it willingly, writing about the Southwest and Chicanos in an effort to communicate who he was and where he came from to those unfamiliar with his childhood world. He wrote to maintain his ties to his family and to fight against the elitism he experienced at an Ivy League school.

Troncoso writes to preserve his connections to the past, but also puts pen to paper for the future. In his three-part essay entitled “Letter to My Young Sons,” he documents the terror of his wife’s breast cancer diagnosis and the ups and downs of her treatment. Other essays convey the joys and frustrations of fatherhood and the impact his wife’s Jewish heritage and religion have on his Mexican-American identity.

Crossing Borders: Personal Essays reveals a writer, father and husband who has crossed linguistic, cultural and intellectual borders to provoke debate about contemporary Latino identity.

Challenging assumptions about literature, the role of writers in America, fatherhood and family, these essays bridge the chasm between the poverty of the border region and the highest echelons of success in America.

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