2021 November Oak Cliff Advocate

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B O O K TA L K

By CLAUDIA VEGA

L i te ra r y h u n ge r F i n d t i m e fo r rea d i n g t h i s fa l l

Y

ou’ve heard of a “grocery desert,” neighborhoods where fresh food is scarce. But how about a book desert? It turns out all but the wealthiest parts of Dallas still lack food for the mind as well as the body. The red on this map represents areas where 0-10% of homes have more than 100 books. As a champion for literacy, on a mission to eradicate the book

desert in Dallas’ southern sector, my nonprofit bookstore, Whose Books, is in the works. Look for our pop-ups around Oak Cliff starting this month. Look for us here, too, as this column, “Book Talk,” could be appearing regularly to recommend books for all ages and reading levels. This list celebrates Latinx stories and can also be found at bookshop.org.

Bright Star by Yuyi Morales Juvenile fiction

Infinite Country by Patricia Engel Fiction

Bright Star is a stunning book. Yuyi Morales weaves together the intricacies of the borderlands with language, texture and color, transporting readers into a landscape that goes unseen by many. Morales researched the Sanora desert landscape, learned about the “No Border Wall Campaign” and visited with migrant families in developing the story. The illustrations, colors and textures of her travels and research come to life as we journey through the borderland with White Star. Fear, hope, courage and community are evident as readers journey through the pages of Bright Star. The book is bold and beautiful and can be enjoyed and shared across age groups and grade levels in a variety of ways. Interactive resources online show the making of Bright Star, and Morales reads it aloud at KidLit.tv.

This New York Times Best Seller is the kind of book that’s hard to put down. It’s just shy of 200 pages, but rich in style and stor y. Talia, th e main charac ter, is b eing held at a correctional facility for adolescent girls in Colombia and desperately works to escape, so that she can reunite with her mother and siblings in the United States. Her family’s decisions and indecisions come together to paint the very real story that is diaspora. Engel presents a universal, ye t extremely intimate story, of a family s e p a rat e d a c r o s s c o n t i n e n t s a n d mixed status. The voices within this novel explore home, allegiance, opportunity, parenthood and love. Infinite Country is a great bookc l u b r e a d a n d d e fi n i t e l y o n e t o share with loved ones.

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NOVEMBER 2021

We Are Not From Here by Jenny Torres Sanchez Young adult fiction Won the Pura Belpré 2021 young adult author award We Are Not From Here takes readers on a journe y of hopeful fear. Jo i n C h i c o , Pu l g a a n d Pe q u e ñ a on the treacherous journey on L a Bestia, as they leave Guatemala for the U.S. Told from two different points of view, it compels readers to look at and acknowledge the p l i g h t o f m i g r a n t s . I t ’s w r i t t e n with poe tic prose, and its dreamlike sequences are captivating. Sanchez does not shy away from the jarring realities that people face on the journey for a new possibility and life. She handles each part of the passage, and the people me t along the way, with care and dignity. It ’s timely, rele vant and honest. The story explores the perils of immigration and the love and hope that resides within family and friendships. If you are looking for a book that will spark conversation, provide insight and understanding, and explore humanness, this i s i t . A g r e at r e a d t o s h a r e w i t h your teenager or young adult, and a m u s t h av e t o a n y h i g h s c h o o l classroom librar y.


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