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¡Ándale, Prieta!

A Love Letter to My Family

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This beautifully open coming-of-age memoir by a Mexican American debut writer doubles as a love letter to the tough grandmother who raised her.

When I tell people who don't speak Spanish what prieta means—dark or the dark one—their eyes pop open and a small gasp escapes... How do I tell them that now, even after the cruelty of children, Prieta means love? That each time Prieta fell from my grandmother's lips, I learned to love my dark skin.

No one calls me that anymore. I miss how her words sounded out loud.

My Ita called me Prieta. When she died, she took the name with her.

Anchored by the tough grandmother who taught her how to stand firm and throw a punch, debut author Yasmín Ramírez writes about the punches life has thrown at her non-traditional family of tough Mexican American women.

Having spent years of her twenties feeling lost—working an intensely taxing retail job and turning to bars for comfort—the blow of her grandmother's death pushes Yasmín to unravel. So she comes home to El Paso, Texas, where people know how to spell her accented name and her mother helps her figure out what to do with her life. Once she finally starts pursuing her passion for writing, Yasmín processes her grief by telling the story of her Ita, a resilient matriarch who was far from the stereotypical domestic abuelita. Yasmín remembers watching boxing matches at a dive bar with her grandmother, Ita wistfully singing old Mexican classics, her mastectomy scar, and of course, her lesson on how to properly ball your fist for a good punch. Interviewing her mom and older sister, Yasmín learns even more about why her Ita was so tough—the abusive men, the toil of almostliterally back-breaking jobs, and the guilt of abortions that went against her culture.

Expertly blending the lyrical prose of a gifted author with the down-to-earthtone of a close friend, this debut memoir marks Ramírez as a talented new author to watch. Her honesty in self-reflection, especially about periods where she felt directionless, and her vivid depictions of a mother and grandmother who persevered through hard knocks, offers vulnerable solidarity to readers who've had hard knocks of their own.

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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2022
      A tribute to the author's fierce grandmother blossoms into a family saga brimming with heartache and love. In the first part, Ram�rez introduces readers to the resilient women who loomed large in her childhood in El Paso, Texas: her maternal great-grandmother, M�ma Lupe; her hardworking mother, Leticia; and, above all, her fiery maternal grandmother, Ita. The fraught, tense relationship between M�ma Lupe and Ita--highlighted in a spectacular chapter devoted to a day at church--exemplifies the knotty bonds that tie mother to daughter, a recurring theme. Throughout the text, Ram�rez interweaves anecdotes of childhood nights spent in bars with Ita (tamer than it sounds); Ita's poignant nightly rituals; details about Leticia's work for Customs at the border separating El Paso and Ju�rez, filling the role of "the brown gatekeeper to other brown people." The clear star of the book is Ita, an unforgettable, larger-than-life character. In one striking chapter, the author tells the stories behind the many scars that mark Ita's body, a literal road map of the older woman's life. Meanwhile, the men in young Ram�rez's life--an absent father, an overindulged uncle, a couple of boyfriends--make appearances as secondary characters, distant shadows at times. In the second part--in which the author moves into adolescence and young adulthood--Ita and Leticia fade into the background, and their absences dull the crackling vitality of the first half. However, it's in the second half of the book that Ram�rez crucially explores her waning relationship with her father. Her attempts over the years to reconnect--often half-hearted but always sincere--culminate in a final effort that seals their differences. Using conversational prose full of vivid imagery, the author successfully explores the many dimensions of her identity as a Mexican American woman. A promising debut, gripping in its honesty.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.2
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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