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Bookstagrammer Lupita Aquino recommends 11 books by Latino authors to read, and not only during Hispanic Heritage Month.
Ten books by Latino authors, from memoirs, histories and novels to poetry offer a distinctive look at the work of several Hispanic novelists and scholars.
Saúl Sánchez, author of the collection Hay Plesha Lichans to di Flac (i.e., "I Pledge Allegiance to the Flag") (1977) [1] Hope Sandoval; John Phillip Santos, author, journalist, and filmmaker; Danzy Senna; Shea Serrano; Michelle Serros, author of Chicana Falsa and How to Be a Chicana Role Model. Beverly Silva, author of The Cat and Other ...
Karly Gaitán Morales (born 1980), film historian, and writer; Salomón Ibarra Mayorga (1887–1985), poet and lyricist of "Salve a ti, Nicaragua", the Nicaraguan national anthem; Erwin Krüger (1915–1973), poet and composer; Francisco Mayorga (born 1949), writer; Christianne Meneses Jacobs (born 1971), writer, editor, and publisher
The genres of Latino speculative fiction, science fiction, and fantasy are rapidly expanding, with an increasing number of works being produced in these areas. This growth has led to a surge in the production of Latino comic books and graphic novels, as highlighted in "Latinx Rising," the first anthology of science fiction and fantasy by ...
When Oprah Winfrey endorsed the novel “American Dirt” for her book club last month, many Latinos took to social media to decry the selection for its stereotypes and caricatures. Across the U.S ...
Gómez's book Lazareto de afecciones was chosen by El Nuevo Dia as one of the best books of 2018. [12] [13] One year later, Lazareto de afecciones won three awards – Best Collection of Short Stories (1st place), Best Latino Fiction Book (2nd place), and Best Popular Fiction Book (2nd place) – at the 2019 International Latino Book Awards, ILBA.
Mexican American literature is literature written by Mexican Americans in the United States.Although its origins can be traced back to the sixteenth century, the bulk of Mexican American literature dates from post-1848 and the United States annexation of large parts of Mexico in the wake of the Mexican–American War.