Fred's profile

Western Avenue and Other Fictions (U of Arizona Press)

Western Avenue and Other Fictions  
In these engaging and often gripping short stories, Fred Arroyo takes us into the lives of working-class Hispanic migrants and immigrants, who are often invisible while they work in plain sight across America. As characters intertwine and evolve across stories, Arroyo creates a larger narrative that dramatizes the choices we make to create identity, make meaning, and deal with hardships and loss.His stories are linked by a concern with borders, both real and imagined, and the power that memory and imagination have to shape and structure our lives.America. As characters intertwine and evolve across stories, Arroyo creates a larger narrative that dramatizes the choices we make to create identity, make meaning, and deal with hardships and loss.His stories are linked by a concern with borders, both real and imagined, and the power that memory and imagination have to shape and structure our lives.

Through his characters and theirtrue-to-life situations, Arroyo makes visible both internal and external conflicts that are deeply rooted in—and affected by—place. A bodega, a university town, a factory, a Chicago street, somedusty potato fields: here is where we encounter ordinary people who work, dream, love, and persist in the face of violence, bereavement, disappointment, and loss—particularly the loss of mothers,fathers, and loved ones.

Arroyo's characters experience a strange wonder as the midwestern United States increasingly appears to be a place created by the Latinas and Latinos who remain outof the sight and minds of Anglos. In lyrical language weighted by detail, exquisite imagery, and evocative story, Arroyo imagines characters who confront the tattered connections between memory andlonging, generations and geographies, place and displacement, as they begin to feel their own longings, "breathing in whatever was offered, feeling, deep in the small and fragile borders of my heart,"as one character puts it, "that it came with a sorrow I could never betray."


Arroyo’s language is like food, his ideas always tugging the reader backward to linger and solve as the narrative flows forward, and his stories reveal neighbors on this earth whose inner lives grow mysteriously stronger as the forces arrayed against them are intensified. These are people we want to know. This is a writer on whom we can rely.
          —Kim Stafford, author of The Muses Among Us: Eloquent Listening and
               Other    Pleasures of the Writer’s Craft

A beautiful collection of stories, passionate, poetic, rich in detail, these stories pull you in and won’t let you go, even long after you put the book down. These stories show what many of us have known since his first book, Fred Arroyo is fundamental to US Latino Literature.
         
—Daniel Chacón, author of Unending Rooms
Western Avenue and Other Fictions (U of Arizona Press)
Published:

Western Avenue and Other Fictions (U of Arizona Press)

A new collection of short story, Western Avenue and Other Fictions, by Fred Arroyo.

Published:

Creative Fields