About the Author:
alurista is one of the seminal and most influential voices in the history of Chicano Literature. A pioneering poet of the Chicano Movement in the late 60s and 70s, he broke down barriers in the publishing world with his use of bilingual and multilingual writings in Spanish, English, Nahuatl and Maya. A scholar, activist, editor, organizer and philosopher, he holds a Ph.D in Spanish and Latin American Literature from the University of California in San Diego and is the author of ten books including Floricanto en Aztlán (1971), Timespace Huracán (1976), Spik in Glyph? (1981) and Z EROS (1995). His book ET TÚ...RAZA? won the Before Columbus Foundation National Book Award in Poetry in 1996. Author of "El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán," he is a key figure in the reclaiming of the MeXicano cultural identity, history and heritage through his integration of American Indian language, symbols and spirituality in his writings.
Review:
alurista experiments on the edge, thickly layers multiple meanings onto each cryptic line through language play, brilliant code-switching ( tu mellow dia ) and love songs to la raza. A statement of survival, he confronts the politics and the hypocrisy of the estados undidos de angloamerica with an irrepressible rhythm, with the slingshots in our hands of pre-Columbian truths, and with the ability to craft real words from our unreal world of avarice and oppression. alurista's tenth book holds many spirit treasures calling out to us from between the lines. Con razon k he hears the haunting spirits beneath the surface -- ayer pare x tu casa/y me ladra/ron/los libros. --Carmen Tafolla, Ph.D., Doctor of Philosophy, poet and Visiting Faculty, University of Texas at San Antonio
Tunaluna is a work of hope, humor, outrage, and beauty by one of our most notable Chicano bards. alurista reminds his readers of the political possibilities of the poetic; in his poems, we hear the song of a people. --Cristina Beltran, Associate Professor of Political Science at Haverford College and author of The Trouble with Unity: Latino Politics and the Creation of Identity
alurista is a master cabulero al estilo raza, destroyer and creator of language. He plucks words from the stream of consciousness and fixes them to a spiral that moves in and out of reality and of comprehension making his poems as meaningful if read from top to bottom as from bottom to top. --Juan Rodriguez, Director, Center for Mexican American Studies/Texas Lutheran University
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