If one is seeking a text to help expand the multicultural approach in a course on contemporary fiction or literature in general, a new collection of short stories by Virgil Suarez may be a successful addition. Welcome to the Oasis and Other Stories has the virtues of compactness in 124 pages and of variety in the length of the six works included, as well as a reasonable cost. An instructor would have the option of including the entire volume in her syllabus, which would provide an assignment easily encompassed in one or two class meetings. Or she could tuck in any one of the tales, ranging from fifty-four to eight large-print pages, wherever they might fit the design of the course
Primarily a screenwriter and film director, Stamadianos has written an impressive first novel (origi...
Although Nash Candelaria has published quite a few short stories, it is in the field of the novel wh...
Rafael Castillo\u27s collection of short stories takes us to the borders, whether they be geographic...
Contra El Viento (Against the Wind) is an autobiography that reads like a novel. This biographical n...
The editor indicated in his foreword that he had several purposes for collecting and assembling the ...
The works included in this anthology, many of them previously printed, reflect six characteristic th...
In the last few years the New Mexican Chicano narrative has taken a significant place within Chicano...
The marvelous narrative ability of Carlos Fuentes has already been discovered by the many readers of...
This collection is aptly titled, for it is fabulous and a pure delight to read. Film director and wr...
Timothy McGovern\u27s latest offering, Galdós Beyond Realism: Reading and the Creation of Magical W...
Review of: Carlos Blanco Aguinaga. Un tiempo tuyo. Madrid, Alfaguara, 1988, 122 pp
Review of: Tolliver, Joyce. Cigar Smoke and Violet Water: Gendered Discourse in the Stories of Emili...
Gary Soto\u27s previous prose collections (Living Up the Street: Narrative Recollections -- 1985, Sm...
Review of: Cecilia Castro Lee, ed., The Literature of Democratic Spain: 1975-1992. Special issue of ...
Modem Latin American Literature (D. P. Gallagher) (Reviewed by Adriana Garciá de Aldridge, The City ...
Primarily a screenwriter and film director, Stamadianos has written an impressive first novel (origi...
Although Nash Candelaria has published quite a few short stories, it is in the field of the novel wh...
Rafael Castillo\u27s collection of short stories takes us to the borders, whether they be geographic...
Contra El Viento (Against the Wind) is an autobiography that reads like a novel. This biographical n...
The editor indicated in his foreword that he had several purposes for collecting and assembling the ...
The works included in this anthology, many of them previously printed, reflect six characteristic th...
In the last few years the New Mexican Chicano narrative has taken a significant place within Chicano...
The marvelous narrative ability of Carlos Fuentes has already been discovered by the many readers of...
This collection is aptly titled, for it is fabulous and a pure delight to read. Film director and wr...
Timothy McGovern\u27s latest offering, Galdós Beyond Realism: Reading and the Creation of Magical W...
Review of: Carlos Blanco Aguinaga. Un tiempo tuyo. Madrid, Alfaguara, 1988, 122 pp
Review of: Tolliver, Joyce. Cigar Smoke and Violet Water: Gendered Discourse in the Stories of Emili...
Gary Soto\u27s previous prose collections (Living Up the Street: Narrative Recollections -- 1985, Sm...
Review of: Cecilia Castro Lee, ed., The Literature of Democratic Spain: 1975-1992. Special issue of ...
Modem Latin American Literature (D. P. Gallagher) (Reviewed by Adriana Garciá de Aldridge, The City ...
Primarily a screenwriter and film director, Stamadianos has written an impressive first novel (origi...
Although Nash Candelaria has published quite a few short stories, it is in the field of the novel wh...
Rafael Castillo\u27s collection of short stories takes us to the borders, whether they be geographic...