It calls you back An odyssey through love, addiction, revolutions, and healing

Luis J. Rodriguez, 1954-

Book - 2011

In a harrowing journey from drugged-out gang member to one of the most revered figures in Chicano literature, Luis J. Rodríguez continues the remarkable story of his bestselling memoir. Readers came to know Rodríguez through his fearless classic, Always Running, which chronicled his life as a young Chicano gang member surviving the dangerous streets of East Los Angeles. This long-awaited follow-up is the equally harrowing story of starting over, at age eighteen, after leaving gang life--the only life he really knew. It opens with Rodríguez's struggle to kick heroin, renounce his former life, and search for meaningful work. He describes his challenges as a father and his difficulty leaving his rages and addictions completely behind. ...Even as he begins to discover success as a writer and an activist, Rodríguez finds that his past--the crimes, the drugs, the things he'd seen and done--has a way of calling him back.--From publisher description.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Touchstone 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Luis J. Rodriguez, 1954- (-)
Edition
1st Touchstone hardcover ed
Physical Description
x, 325 p. ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781416584162
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Rodriguez's best-selling memoir of Chicano gang life in East L.A., Always Running (1993), is an essential work in American letters. In the intervening years, Rodriguez has written numerous works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for all ages while working with at-risk teens. In his galvanizing return to autobiography, he picks up his story in 1973, when, in spite of being a gang member with a record, he attempts to stop two police officers from beating a young, handcuffed Mexican woman. After his subsequent arrest, he vows to go straight and devote himself to art and social action. But his path to a creative, constructive, and giving life is a harrowing one, complicated by racism, substance abuse, poverty, and despair. Writing with needle-to-skin candor, Rodriguez reveals dark family secrets and chronicles his struggles to do right in grueling jobs, marriage, and fatherhood. Against all odds, he becomes a journalist, only to be fired for his exposes of police brutality. Hard-won success as a writer and innovative community activist follows, even as his eldest son joins a gang and lands in prison. Rodriguez's courageously forthright memoir illuminates the tragedies of prejudice, gangs, and the prison-industrial complex; affirms the need for equality, education, and rewarding work; and reminds us of the tremendous potential of every life.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

L.A. author and poet Rodriguez has written extensively on his redemptive turn from gang warfare and jail to self-awareness and community activism (Always Running). Here he deliberates pointedly on that journey accompanied by the safety of reflective hindsight. He fills in the details of his erratic trajectory, played out on the edge of a recklessness and anger fueled by growing up in an impoverished barrio in the San Gabriel Valley of L.A. County, where many Hispanic youth get sucked into a self-perpetuating pursuit of drugs, gang life, repeated arrest, early pregnancy, blunted education, and dead-end jobs. His early life was no exception from this depressing pattern of failure: born to hardworking Mexican immigrants, a member of Las Lomas gang, pumped up on drugs, he served some months in jail in 1973 for assaulting police officers. He yearned for "another way to go," and managed to get clean in jail and walk away from that life, marry a like-minded young woman (she was only 18), secure a brief career at Bethlehem Steel, and get involved in issues of social justice. Even in his apprenticeship as a "minority" journalist, however, the soreness from old wounds continued to disturb him, especially in the raising of his children from different wives. Rodriguez tells an honest, direct story, though stripped of rawness by years of reworking. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Always Running (1994), acclaimed journalist, poet and fiction writer Rodriguez (Music of the Mill, 2005, etc.) chronicles his struggle to leave behind a drug- and crime-ridden world that always threatened to "call him back." An acute political consciousness and powerful love of the written word ultimately saved the author from the lurking dangers of the street and the "nothing life" to which most Latinos in East Los Angeles were automatically condemned. After leading a thankless working-class existence that amounted to little more than "despair on the fast track," Rodriguez landed in a training program for minority journalists at UC-Berkeley. "[A]s a reporter," he writes, "I could help right the wrongs, accomplish something long lasting with what I was being given. Now truth and the full picture could bleed from the pen or a camera, not from a gun." But the way forward was as difficult as it was anguished. At every turn, Rodriguez had to face not only a troubled past that still beckoned to him, but also his own personal demons: alcoholism, heroine addiction and a violent temper that indiscriminately "roll[ed] over people, family, friends, kids, [and] enemies." He overcame his darker urgings, but not without revisiting them through his eldest son, who became tragically entangled in the "web" Rodriguez had escaped. Yet it was this very crisis that brought him into more authentic alignment with himself as it drew him closer to a family and community that, for all its "diversity and antagonisms," he could not help but love. Raw, searing reading from start to finish.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.