Saturday, February 17, 2024

Latinoland by Marie Arana

LATINOLAND by Marie Arana is subtitled “A Portrait of America's Largest and Least Understood Minority.” Arana, a prolific author and finalist for the National Book Award, is very honest, creative and personal in her approach to this topic. She notes that “today one in five souls on American soil claims Hispanic heritage” and “we are not a unified people.” Her efforts to share her experiences and the stories of individuals like Carolyn Curiel or Ellen Ochoa add detail. However, as even she points out “one book cannot possibly capture the whole” and this necessarily broad brush tends to cloud summary conclusions. I had expected more data to be readily available and wish that Arana had been able to include more charts and graphs in addition to the sweeping historical reflection and moving stories she shares. LATINOLAND is extremely well-researched with Arana including copious notes that comprise almost a third of the text. Both Booklist and Kirkus (“an impressively wide-ranging overview”) gave Arana’s work a starred review.

Did you know that there are plans to open a National Museum of the American Latino on the National Capital Mall in 2035? There are so many interesting written works and resources available. Examples include Harvest of Empire (revised in 2022) by Juan Gonzalez, many of the books by Héctor Tobar, and (especially for high school readers) Living Beyond Borders (2021) edited by Margarita Longoria. The much older (2013) Latino Americans from Ray Suarez was also a series on pbs; the accompanying website features ideas for lesson plans and educational materials such as updated statistics from Pew Research Center.  Numerous schools and colleges have crafted libguides for Hispanic Heritage Month; one of the most comprehensive is from Rice University’s Fondren Library. No doubt Marie Arana (who disparages Nixon’s efforts to create the original week in honor of American Hispanics) would at least encourage more conversation around these materials; as she says, “although we account for more than half of the US population growth over the last decade … it seems as if the rest of the country is perpetually in the act of discovering us.”

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