Daniel Alarcón
@radioambulante / @elhilopodcast / @newyorker / @columbiajourn
Book Recommendations:
Recommended by Daniel Alarcón
“@BaskinJon @PhilKlay i was about to recommend this book as well. really exceptional. i confess that i haven’t read any other mailer, but these two essays are amazing.” (from X)
by Norman Mailer·You?
Este libro, galardonado con los premios Pulitzer y National Book Award, «un clásico», en palabras de Doctorow, está inspirado en la célebre «marcha sobre el Pentágono», el 21 de octubre de 1967, en la que estaban representados todos los grupos de la vieja y la nueva izquierda, hippies, yuppies, weathermen, cuáqueros, cristianos, feministas y las más variadas tribus urbanas. Mailer, junto con otras estrellas de la cultura americana de la época, fue, vio, participó, sufrió en carne propia la represión y escribió luego uno de los libros más descarnados e inteligentes sobre la década de los sesenta, sus mitos, sus héroes y sus demonios. Los ejércitos de la noche es una crónica de acontecimientos históricos que es también una novela y, en última instancia, un capítulo de la autobiografía de Norman Mailer. Porque el escritor, en esta «novela de no ficción», se constituye en personaje de su libro y deja que la historia, con toda su complejidad y sus contradicciones, hable en él.
Recommended by Daniel Alarcón
“I've just been reminded that @AlbertSamaha's new book comes out in a week. I'm here to tell you it's brilliant and moving and you need to read it.” (from X)
by Albert Samaha·You?
by Albert Samaha·You?
“Absolutely extraordinary...A landmark in the contemporary literature of the diaspora.” —Jia Tolentino, author of Trick Mirror “If Concepcion were only about Samaha’s mother, it would already be wholly worthwhile. But she was one of eight children in the Concepcion family, whose ancestry Samaha traces in this. . . powerful book.” –The New York Times A journalist's powerful and incisive account of the forces steering the fate of his sprawling Filipino American family reframes how we comprehend the immigrant experience Nearing the age at which his mother had migrated to the US, part of the wave of non-Europeans who arrived after immigration quotas were relaxed in 1965, Albert Samaha began to question the ironclad belief in a better future that had inspired her family to uproot themselves from their birthplace. As she, her brother Spanky—a rising pop star back in Manila, now working as a luggage handler at San Francisco airport—and others of their generation struggled with setbacks amid mounting instability that seemed to keep prosperity ever out of reach, he wondered whether their decision to abandon a middle-class existence in the Philippines had been worth the cost. Tracing his family’s history through the region’s unique geopolitical roots in Spanish colonialism, American intervention, and Japanese occupation, Samaha fits their arc into the wider story of global migration as determined by chess moves among superpowers. Ambitious, intimate, and incisive, Concepcion explores what it might mean to reckon with the unjust legacy of imperialism, to live with contradiction and hope, to fight for the unrealized ideals of an inherited homeland.