Retablos Stories from a life lived along the border

Octavio Solis

Book - 2018

"Seminal moments, rites of passage, crystalline vignettes--a memoir about growing up brown at the U.S./Mexico border"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Solis, Octavio
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2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Solis, Octavio Due Nov 20, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
San Francisco, CA : City Lights Books [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Octavio Solis (author)
Physical Description
168 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780872867864
  • On My "Retablos"
  • Retablos
  • The Way Over
  • In the Shimmer
  • Red
  • Blood and Coke
  • Consuelo
  • Keening
  • My Friend Memín
  • El Judío
  • El Mar
  • Thieves Like Us
  • My Monsters
  • Ben
  • Our Other House
  • Saturday
  • The Mexican I Needed
  • La Migra
  • The Little Woods
  • The Cotton
  • La Llorona
  • Wild Kingdom
  • Our Blackie
  • El Mero Mero
  • Nothing Happens
  • El Kitty
  • Locura
  • Jeep in the Water
  • Skinny Brown Kid Doesn't Know Shit
  • Siren Songs
  • First Day
  • World Goes Away
  • Bad Blood
  • Penitente
  • The Quince
  • The Sister
  • Fred's Herb
  • Jesus in Our Mouths
  • Cisco
  • Demon
  • Mexican Apology
  • The Runner
  • La Mariscal
  • Tumble-Down
  • A Wall Between
  • El Segundo
  • The Want
  • The Runner II
  • Neto
  • My Right Foot
  • The Runner III.
Review by Booklist Review

Hundreds of residents on the Texas-Mexico border recently had their U.S. passports revoked, making renowned playwright Solis' declaration in the introduction to this sui generis memoir that the shit on the border never changes a bit premature. It seems that things can always get worse. A self-described anchor baby, Solis shares his memories as a brown person on the border with a keen eye and an agile way with words, endowing these snapshots from his childhood in El Paso with the visceral gut punch of Mexican retablos , devotional paintings in vivid colors on metal or wood. Solis hones each scene with striking sensual imagery: his grandmother Mama Concha with her rollers, red lipstick, sagging hose, and purse fragrant with Wrigley's Chewing Gum ; the ghostly figure of a runner who threads his way through the book, aging as Solis ages, advancing under Solis' curious gaze, then vanishing into a misty distance. In all, a beautiful, evocative, and timely expression of border culture for every library collection.--Sara Martinez Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this debut memoir, playwright Solis delivers top-notch vignettes of his youth with riveting imagery and empathy, recounting-and embellishing, he says-memories of growing up brown in El Paso, Tex. Framed as a series of retablos ("a devotional painting [depicting] a dire event... which the person survives thanks to the intercession of the Divine. At once visual and literary, they record the transgression, the divine mediation and the offering of thanks in a single frame, [like] a kind of flash-fiction account of that person's electrifying, life-altering event"), the chapters capture poignant scenes with both the innocence of childhood and mature hindsight: after recounting mispronouncing "ocean" in front of his whole class, Solis concludes, "To get the pronunciation right in the end, I had to get it wrong in the beginning." That mature perspective is alive to structural injustice: of discovering a border crosser during a game of hide-and-seek, Solis notes, "I'm hiding for fun. She's hiding for her life." He displays his talent in startling descriptions: the "dog who wears his tongue on the side of his mouth like a scarf," the act of "taking English and dropping its chassis and adding some hot rims." These brilliantly told stories of missteps and redemption are a treat. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this coming-of-age memoir, a playwright illuminates the culture of the El Paso border as he perceived it when he was young.Award-winning playwright Solis explains the genesis of his debut book before proceeding to vignettes of his formative years in a border city. First, the title, as he explains it, refers to "a devotional paintingat once visual and literary, [which] records the transgression, the divine mediation and the offering of thanks in a single frame, thus forming a kind of flash-fiction account of that person's electrifying, life-altering event." Thus we have a series of self-contained vignettes, though there are some connecting threadse.g., family, the mysterious outsider boy known only as "Demon," and the equally mysterious "Runner," who may be running to something or from something but never stops to explain himself. Solis describes the stories as "disconnected (and yet thoroughly interconnected, noting that, through memory and reconstruction, "I'm trying to figure myself out. I'm coming to terms with who I am by looking back at what I was." Inevitably, he deals with identity, as a boy born in America to Mexican parents, with sexual awakening, and with the first stirrings of his literary ambitions. The pieces follow a chronological progression, though with a recognition that border issues and tensions are timeless, that "there will always be those who want to come across and those who want to keep them where they are." By the time he made his first return from college, he viewed his city, family, and origins with a totally fresh perspective. Within these pieces, he aims for a truth that he admits has been filtered through memory and shaped by selection: "I suppose I am using the poetic voice to convey the authentic."An intriguing work that transcends category, drawing from facts but reading like fiction. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

WORLD GOES AWAY     I'm in disbelief. I'm at a loss to explain how I got here. It's my first week as a sophomore, and instead of enjoying the afternoons watching TV and doing my homework at my leisure, I'm at the first reading of The Diary of Anne Frank at my school. All these poor idiots are sitting in a circle with me, also wondering how they got here, some of them pleased as punch, others with the same perplexed look that's plastered on my face. We're assembled in the auditorium, which also passes for the basketball court gymnasium. Listening to our drama coach laying down the laws of daily rehearsal. Miss G. is a feisty West-Texan battleax of a woman, built like a bulldog with close cropped hair and glasses, and she's calmly setting forth the hours and days we'll be working and underscoring her expectations of us as actors in the show. She's grinning all smug and shit 'cause she knows some of us will defy these expectations for which she's got gallons of two-fisted fury saved up in her compact frame. For now, her bearing is enough to keep us in line. All I'm thinking is, shit, my afternoons are shot to hell forever. What's worse is that now she has us holding hands and bowing our heads for prayer circle. She's calling for Jesus to bless our production, assuring him that we're only here to do his will, even though the play is about Jews in Nazi Europe. I'm confused and dismayed as this cycle of prayer goes on for a full fifteen minutes, with other students chiming in their amens and yes-fathers. If this is going to happen every time we meet for play practice, then I'm done. I'm already suffocating in all this sudden godliness, all these rules, all the hours wasted in a cavernous gym with this tough bespectacled teacher crying halleluyah. I don't know how she managed to get me to agree to be in this show, but I'm getting out of this obligation quick. I resolve to sit through this one session with as good an attitude as I can rally up but when it's over, it's over. I'm not coming back. Not even if I'm playing Peter Van Daam, which is one of the young leads in the play. I don't care. Let them find someone else. Finally, with everyone already worked up on Jesus, we take our seats in the circle as Miss G. passes out the scripts for the play. She reminds us who's playing what role and directs us to read loudly, with feeling and enunciation. That last word is new to me but it sounds pretty religious. We open the scripts and begin reading, and gradually, with the first girl's voice taking on the words of Anne Frank, the physics in the room begin to change. I feel the voice of this dark long-haired Mexican schoolgirl peel away the walls of the gym to reveal wartime Amsterdam, and then I see Anne herself huddled with her diary in the secret attic of her tragic story. Within the empty space of the circle, other voices around me lay forth the vivid action of the play with passion, energy and conviction until it's my turn and then some impulse takes over and I'm not me anymore but Peter himself aching for sunlight and a place of no fear and the love of a young girl. The words go in my eyes and come out my mouth with all the heart I can summon and in that magical spell, the school and the impossible classloads and the gangs that chase me on the way home and the Border Patrol and the tensions of home and my personal anxieties about who the fuck I am and all the lived experience that make my town this unspectacular, sporadically dangerous place simply go away. I am somewhere in the mind of a teenage girl who disappeared into the death camps of our cruel past, inhabiting her words like they're the only world that matters. When we get to the end, our Anne is openly crying as a mournful hush falls over us. I am choked up with bewilderment. I want to know how this happened, how we made the world vanish for these few hours of reading. After we stand and hold hands one more time for an adjourning prayer, Miss G. comes to me while I gather my homework to go home. She obviously senses my confusion. With my eyes on the script, I want to tell her it's a miracle, this play is a miracle, how it made all the people and things, all my cares and worries of my world, evaporate into nothing. But she beats me to it, saying, Well. You're still here. I look at her. I want to ask what she means.   She smiles that smug smile that knows I'll violate, maybe even exceed, her expectations, and turns to go turn off the gymnasium lights, while I walk home in the dark, eager to find my heart again in wartime Amsterdam.     IN THE SHIMMER   In the clouded window of my early childhood, I perceive my grandmother. Mamá Concha we call her. She's undoing hair rollers and applying bright red lipstick before the bathroom mirror. I see her short stocky legs in their saggy hose slip into her shoes with the blocky heels. Her purse is redolent with the fragrance of Wrigley's Chewing Gum and scented tissues that seem to burst from inside every time she unclasps it. She gives me half a stick of spearmint, slipping the other half in her mouth. She dresses me up in my best shirt and pants and combs my hair till it's waxed down like Alfalfa's in the Our Gang serials. Then we're outside. I perceive her sitting beside me on the city bus noisily taking us downtown. I watch her nervous hands smooth the pinstripes of her blue cotton dress over and over while she smacks the gum in her mouth and stares straight ahead like a lover on her way to an assignation. The bus driver asks her something in Spanish and she answers in the old country manner. Ay. I catch his gaze through the mirror over his head, how his eyes probe and ponder over us during the whole length of the ride. She takes a tissue from her purse and with a little spit on it wipes the scuff off my shoes, which dangle just off the seat, and she reties my laces till my feet throb. I hear the gassy exhalation of the bus heaving to a stop and the door swishing open to la Placita de los Lagartos, which is teeming with more people than I've ever seen in my life. The sun is high and bright. I perceive the tightness of her grip on my soft hand as she guides us to the central fountain in the tree-lined plaza, where she lifts me up with her sturdy arms to her bosom and shows me the alligators basking in the radiant heat. One of them is dozing in its pond, and one has its jaws wide open, a soft-serve ice cream cone melting on its back. I count the cigarette butts and candy wrappers floating in the pond all around them. Is this what we came to see? No, not this. I perceive more people gathering in the plaza and in the windows of the buildings around us. They're crowded together for a view of something to come. Above them the sky is a brilliant unsullied blue that scares me, it's so wide and cloudless and perfect. My grandmother takes me by the hand and pushes through the mass of people, all of them murmuring and speaking and some even shouting. She's smaller than most of them but with her purse she rams a path toward the more crowded edge of the plaza. Some people give her the stink-eye, some of them jab their elbows back and sneer at me, but she's dogged in her mission. Then I lose her. Somehow, our knotted fingers fray and set me loose among the dense forest of legs and shoes and handbags and even a little weenie dog on a leash, panting with fear and heat and congestion, and I think I must have the same look as I call out for her. Mamá Concha! Mamá Concha! I feel the crowd surge in one direction and knock me down and some lady's heel stamps on my hand and I start to cry. The sounds of several cars coming to a stop somewhere near set off a riotous noise that drowns out my cries. Shifting bodies pressed hard against each other buffet me about like a piñata. Frantic, I look straight up for even a fragment of that blue sky but now it's a swarm of balloons and millions of tiny shreds of colored paper flitting and falling like snowflakes on everyone. This clamor of yelling and screaming, I feel it in my teeth, my bones, all the way down to my feet, till the ground is bellowing against the weight of all these stomping, bounding, jerking feet. The storm of people is so total, so consuming and suffocating, and it moves with such a single anarchic mind, that I think I'll drown in it, I think I'll die. I scream with all my strength, MAMÁ CONCHA! But I can't hear myself. I can't hear anything but this crazy thunder of voices. Out of this frenzy, the hands of my grandmother descend and take me by the ribs and lift me up, up, above the throng, and aim me in the direction of the Hotel Cortez across the street. I'm blinded by the glare of the sun's reflection in the windows, rectangles of glass flashing into my eyes. Then, for just a moment, through the starbursts of white sunlight and a thousand hands raised in some kind of jubilation, I see a man's epic smile on a head of blazing red hair, all teeth and red-orange hair and his hand running through it before it waves at the crowd, waves distinctly at me, too, this man with fire in his hair and eyes of Olympian blue and a smile that encompasses all of us appears for just a glimpse before I lose him again in the shimmer, but I'm above the tumult now, tears glistening on my flushed cheeks, pale and hot, numb and blind, bounced along to the chants of Viva Kennedy! ¡Viva Kennedy! ¡Viva Kennedy!   Excerpted from Retablos by Octavio Solis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.