Names on a map

Names on a map

a novel

to Benjamin Alire Saenz
3/5
(30 akɔdadawo)
Format
426 axawo dzi, Paperback
Wotae zi gbãtɔ
2008
Gbeƒãɖelawo
Harper Perennial
Nyatiwo
Vietnam war·1961-1975·Mexican americans·Fiction·Mexican americans·Texas·El paso·Fiction·Mexican american families·Fiction·Draft·Fiction
Gbegbᴐgblᴐ
English

I cannot say enough times how much I love this author. He is now 3 for 3 for the books I have read of his.

America's generation gap was exposed in the late 1960s to a degree that may never be reached again because, as the war in Viet Nam claimed more and more young lives, Americans found themselves politically at war with each other in a way that sometimes managed to split apart even families. Fathers fought sons, wives fought husbands, students fought teachers, the clergy fought the government, and young men fought themselves because duty to country so often conflicted with what was in their hearts.

While America's "Greatest Generation" had World War II and today's generation has the ongoing Gulf War, a generation that lived through the Sixties had Vietnam, a military conflict that indisputably defined an era and carved a permanent wound into the nation's psyche. Award-winning author and poet Benjamin Alire Sáenz has boldly sidestepped contemporary history and set his sights on revisiting our nation's turbulent past to tenderly tell the story of an immigrant family trying to adapt to its adopted land while coming to terms with the true cost of freedom in America.

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