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WILD TONGUES CAN'T BE TAMED by Saraciea J. Fennell

WILD TONGUES CAN'T BE TAMED

15 Voices From the Latinx Diaspora

edited by Saraciea J. Fennell

Pub Date: Nov. 2nd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-250-76342-6
Publisher: Flatiron Books

Fifteen Latinx writers lend their voices and experiences to acutely personal narratives and poetry.

In her introduction, editor and contributor Fennell provides a mission statement, one centered on “letting our truths run wild, and pushing against whatever it is you think is the ideal Latinx individual.” The truth, it seems, is undefinable and utterly human, with recurring themes cropping up throughout the collection: questions around mental health in Latinx communities, colorism and racism, the boundaries of language (known and unknown), and finding comfort and familiarity in food. Mark Oshiro’s “Eres Un Pocho” opens the anthology with an interrogation of what “it means to be Latino, what it means to be queer,” and the drawbacks of assimilation. In Meg Medina’s “The Mark of a Good Man,” the heartbreaking tale of a Cuban uncle’s arrival in the U.S. underscores the potency of migration and the limits of the American dream. Meanwhile, Kahlil Haywood’s “Paraíso Negro” recounts the writer’s numerous trips to Panama and a slow examination of Afro-Latinx identity, while Ibi Zoboi’s “Haitian Sensation” complicates and explores what it means to be Haitian, Black, and perhaps (not) Afro-Latina. This volume presents an impressive roster of voices from an array of cultural backgrounds claimed and unclaimed. The contradictions and interplays that emerge between essays serve to illuminate the immeasurable realities of the Latinx diaspora.

A tremendously thought-provoking (re)construction of Latinx experiences.

(about the authors) (Nonfiction anthology. 12-18)