Traces the challenges faced by four generations of a Dominican family after leaving their poverty-stricken country under the dictator, Trujillo, and arriving in Queens, New York, where the youngest son gains U.S. citizenship. 10,000 first printing.
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A sensitive and nuanced account of one Dominican family's immigration experience. In the mid-1980s, Dominicans were the fastest-growing group of immigrants in New York City. Newsday reporter Fischkin's account of the Almonte family's move to New York City began as a year-long newspaper series and ended as a decade-long book project. The family members are rendered as fully and refreshingly human, defying both the negative stereotypes and the heroic clich‚s that so often clutter media portrayals of immigrants. Javier had been dreaming of leaving his native town, Cam£, since childhood. But his sister Marta was the first of the Almontes to go to New York, abandoning her young children to do it. She eventually made it possible for many of the rest of her family to come over, both by sending them money and by finding them jobs when they arrived. In 1986, Javier's wife, Roselia, was forced to decide between joining Javier, who had already moved to Queens, and staying with her children--immigration officers would not issue visas to all three children, claiming Javier would not be able to support them. So Roselia took the oldest and left the two younger ones behind. Here Fischkin's reporting becomes part of the story--a congressman reads about the divided family and arranges visas for Cristian and Mauricio. But Cristian never really learns English; she watches too much TV and breaks her father's heart by moving back to the Dominican Republic with her much-older boyfriend. Mauricio, the youngest, wants to be a writer. By the book's end, he's in graduate school studying Spanish literature. Fischkin smoothly and gracefully tells a complex tale by interweaving parents' and children's vastly different perspectives, as well as an account of the Dominican Republic's troubled history. A human side to currrent policy debates on immigration--well timed and well told. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Missing in debates on immigration policy are the faces and voices of those who come to the U.S. and struggle to find new homes here. Fischkin, a daughter of Eastern European immigrants, wrote a prizewinning, yearlong series for Newsday in 1986 about a family of Dominicans in New York City; now, 10 years later, she offers a portrait of that family, the Almontes, in their old country as well as their new one. Patriarch Javier grew up in an impoverished nation under the thumb of El Jefe, dictator Rafael Trujillo; unable to support his family, he heads north, eventually bringing his family to Queens, where his children gradually learn the ways of their new country. Fischkin fills in details of Dominican history and of her decade-long relationship with the Almonte family and mulls similarities and differences between her mother's experiences as an immigrant two generations ago and those of the Almontes. A vivid narrative that brings to life an often invisible immigrant group. Mary Carroll
The original assignment for Fischkin, a staff writer for Newsday, was a year-long series on an immigrant family in New York City in the 1980s. This compilation of that series is the culmination of a decade-long relationship between the writer (herself the daughter of immigrants) and the Almonte family. The story originates in the Dominican Republic and relates life in the campo through three generations of Almontes. Fischkin narrates the dreams, struggles, and perspectives of each of the Almontes as their family is fragmented and gradually reconsolidated on these shores. She gives an intimate account of immigrant life in contemporary America, with all the bureaucratic quagmires, language barriers, and transformations that are involved. This masterfully woven tale strikes at the heart of the American identity, still as much a process of becoming as it is of being. Recommended for general readers.?Tricia Gray, Miami Univ. Oxford, Ohio
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Seller: 2Vbooks, Derwood, MD, U.S.A.
Hard cover. Condition: Fine in fine dust jacket. Sewn binding. Cloth over boards. 367 p. Audience: General/trade. No previous owner's name HC 220. Seller Inventory # Alibris.0030027
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hardcover. Condition: Very Good in Dustjacket. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. New York. 1997. August 1997. Scribner. 1st American Printing. Very Good in Dustjacket. 0684807041. 367 pages. hardcover. Jacket photograph by Bruce Gilbert. keywords: America Dominican Republic Immigrants Sociology. DESCRIPTION - This textured tale of the modern immigrant begins with Javier Almonte, who was born in a palm hut and, as a schoolboy, pledged his allegiance to the dictator Rafael Trujillo - the man who was courted by a fickle government in Washington, D.C., and then overthrown with its help. It ends with Javier's son Mauricio, an American graduate student whose heroes are Bob Dylan and Allen Ginsberg. We also meet Roselia, Javier's wife, who has to make a wrenching choice to leave her children for the good of the family; Elizabeth, the determined eldest child, who embraces her new life; and Cristian, the youngest daughter, who ultimately returns to her homeland as a child bride. In Muddy Cup, Barbara Fischkin illuminates the frustration of getting an American visa and the disorienting effects of unfamiliar customs, habits, and a strange tongue. With skill and elan, she weaves the 'common threads in our disparate backgrounds' into the tapestry that is the story of immigration and modern America. Ultimately, the Almontes' story is a rich testimonial to our nation of immigrants. inventory #24107. Seller Inventory # z24107
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