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True Tales from Another Mexico

True Tales from Another Mexico

List Price: $21.95
Your Price: $21.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "A wonder and a delight" says The Wilson Quarterly
Review: "This beautifully written collection of essays is a wonder and a delight. . . . Quinones has succeeded in finding 'another Mexico'. Intimately tied to the United States, it is at times far from God, but as this splendid book shows, it is also in the midst of a transformation."-Wilson Quarterly

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chalino is the bomb!!!
Review: IN MANY OF THE STATEMENTS THAT I READ I SEEN THAT MANY SAID A LOT ABOUT THE WRITTER WELL WE ALL HAVE MANY OPINIONS I PERSONALLY HAVE MY OWN OPINION I THINK IS ONE MY GREAT BOOKS THAT I HAVE TO READ IN MY FREE TIME LIKE SCHOOL OR JUST ABOUT ANYWHERE BUT JUST WANTED TO ADD THAT I LOVE CHALINO AS THE PERSON HE WAS A WHILE BACK WITH HIS MUSIC I ADMIRE HIM AS A FATHER AND I AM IN LOVE WITH HIS SON 4-SHO!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A riveting social history
Review: Quinones has an eye for Mexico that's not shared by most gringo writers. And he's got the ability to insinuate himself into situations that none of us have the flair, diplomacy -- or even the cojones -- to penetrate. Like hanging with the Kansas City gang out in Zamora. Or explaining those fancy but unoccupied houses out in the hinterland.

He's got the ability to transcend just world of Mexico -- he even knows that Dickies manufactures for LL Bean.

Frequently when I relate something I've read about Mexico to Mexicans, asking for their verification, I'm laughed out of the room. I queried our in-house panel of experts - Ramiro, my gardener who owns two Paleterias Michoacanas right in the 'hood, and Maria, the woman who works for me and hails from a burg in the Tierra Caliente -- and they agreed with Quinones' assessments.

Now, we all know what rancho and corrido mean. Or so we think. But Quinones takes those concepts just a step farther, explaining the social importance of concepts like these, threading the sense of community throughout each story in this book.

And did you notice that the publisher bound this book just a notch above the usual bindings? It's a library binding, and that says something. This book demands it, because it's one to be read over and over again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "A wonder and a delight" says The Wilson Quarterly
Review: Quinones' reporting gives you the best of both worlds--the clear-eyed objectivity and perspective of an extremely knowledgeable news reporter, with a feature writer's ability to dig into revealing street-level stories. Quinones belongs to the rare breed of reporter who can tell a compelling human-interest story without getting all weepy and sentimental about the people he's profiling. And he can keep a popular perspective while writing about the people pulling the levers of power, never mimicking their bureaucratic jargon or relying too much on dubious statistics. If everyone could combine the best qualities of news and feature reporting the way Quinones does, American journalism would be in much better shape.

The only time I sense him getting too close to a source is in his "Popsicle Kings of Tocumbo" where he misses the obvious parallels between the ice-cream vendors and Amway salesmen. (Maybe Amway would be more successful if it followed the popsicle kings' example and actually sold products people wanted at reasonable prices.) On the whole, however, he does a fantastic job, doing some especially intriguing fact-finding in the "Lynching In Huejutla" chapter.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read.
Review: This book is fantastic. I don't often actually buy non-fiction because I usually don't plan to re-read it. This is a rare exception. Quinones is 1st & foremost a great storyteller. You'd hardly notice that it's all true if it weren't for the fact that these tales are simply too good to be fiction. Quinones has a knack for noticing the seemingly invisible. The best example being the tale of Chalino Sanchez (who graces the cover). How could someone who completely misses the U.S. radar of popular culture become a folk hero and single-handedly create a musical genre selling millions of copies of albums in the process & then having at least 1,500 songs written about him? Quinones manages to make it sound perfectly believable. If you're anything like me you'll be mesmerized by these essays.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Give us more!
Review: This book will blow your mind. Quinones is able to totally take you into worlds rarely heard about before. Who knew there was a thriving basketball hotbed in Oaxaca that has been transported to LA? The whole genre of narcocorridos (basically, traditional Mexican "country" [ranchero] music with a gangsta slant) started in LA, too.

The topics of lynchings in rural Mexico, the popularity of telenovelas at home and in Eastern Europe(?) and the religious cult at Neuva Jerusalen are all so fascinating and far beyond anything anyone has probably imagined Mexico to be.

He has an inate ability to dig up and find the most fascinating stories in the most out-of-the-way places yet also show how they often are a microcosmic reflection of how Mexican society operates in general.

The question is: When is Sam Quinones going to compile a Tales 2?


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