The circuit Stories from the life of a migrant child

Francisco Jiménez, 1943-

Book - 1997

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jFICTION/Jimenez, Francisco
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jFICTION/Jimenez, Francisco Checked In
Subjects
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin c1997.
Language
English
Main Author
Francisco Jiménez, 1943- (-)
Item Description
Sequel: Breaking through.
Physical Description
116 p. ; 18 cm
ISBN
9780826317971
9780395979020
  • Acknowledgments
  • Under the Wire
  • Soledad
  • Inside Out
  • Miracle in Tent City
  • El Angel de Oro
  • Christmas Gift
  • Death Forgiven
  • Cotton Sack
  • The Circuit
  • Learning the Game
  • To Have and to Hold
  • Moving Still
  • A Note from the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Gr. 5 and up. Jimenez's exquisite autobiographical short story "The Circuit" is widely anthologized. Now he has connected it with 11 more stories that are based on his experience as a child in a migrant farmworker family, from the time they leave Mexico to enter the U.S. "under the wire" through the years of moving from place to place, picking cotton, picking grapes, picking strawberries, thinning lettuce, topping carrots, always moving. Panchito's dream is elemental: to stay in one place, to go to school without months of interruption. His joy is to return to a place that he recognizes. Each of these short stories builds quietly to a surprise that reveals the truth, and together the stories lead to the tearing climax. The characters aren't idealized: though the family is warm, their bitter struggle creates anger and jealousy as well as love. They meet a migrant worker who had to leave his family behind in Mexico, but Panchito and his parents and his brothers and sisters are "all living at home," together, even though they are "moving still." Some teachers are kind; some classrooms and playgrounds are ugly. The simple words are both fact and poetry: the physicalness of the backbreaking work ("When you get tired from squatting, you can pick on your knees"); the yearning for education, for place. Almost nothing has been written for young readers about this Chicano experience, except for Pat Mora's picture book about Rivera, Tomas and the Library Lady (1997), Ada Flor Ada's Gathering the Sun (1997), and photo-essays, such as Beth Atkin's Voices from the Fields (1993). Like Steinbeck's classic Grapes of Wrath, Jimenez's stories combine stark social realism with heartrending personal drama. --Hazel Rochman

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.