Barefoot dogs Stories

Antonio Ruiz-Camacho, 1973-

Book - 2015

"An unforgettable debut of linked stories that follow the members and retinue of a wealthy Mexican family forced into exile after the patriarch is kidnapped. On an unremarkable night, Jose; Victoriano Arteaga--the head of a thriving Mexico City family--vanishes on his way home from work. The Arteagas find few answers; the full truth of what happened to Arteaga is lost to the shadows of Mexico's vast and desperate underworld, a place of rampant violence and kidnappings, and government corruption. But soon packages arrive to the family house, offering horrifying clues. Fear, guilt, and the prospect of financial ruination fracture the once-proud family and scatter them across the globe, yet delicate threads still hold them together...: in a swimming pool in Palo Alto, Arteaga's young grandson struggles to make sense of the grief that has hobbled his family; in Mexico City, Arteaga's mistress alternates between rage and heartbreak as she waits, in growing panic, for her lover's return; in Austin, the Arteagas' housekeeper tries to piece together a second life in an alienating and demeaning new land; in Madrid, Arteaga's son takes his ailing dog through the hot and unforgiving streets, in search of his father's ghost. Multiple award-winning author Antonio Ruiz-Camacho offers an exquisite and intimate evocation of the loneliness, love, hope, and fear that can bind a family even as unspeakable violence tears it apart. "A straight-on jab to the soul" (Ben Fountain, author of Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk), Barefoot Dogs is a heartfelt elegy to the stolen innocence of every family struck by tragedy. This is urgent and vital fiction"--

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Published
New York : Scribner 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Antonio Ruiz-Camacho, 1973- (-)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
vii, 146 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781476784960
  • It will be awesome before spring
  • Okie
  • Origami prunes
  • I clench my hands into fists and they look like someone else's
  • Deers
  • Better latitude
  • Her odor first
  • Barefoot dogs
  • The Arteaga family tree.
Review by New York Times Review

TOWARD THE BEGINNING of "Barefoot Dogs," Antonio Ruiz-Camacho's lean and beautifully rendered debut collection, a mother tells her young son why they had to abandon their privileged life in Mexico for a lonelier existence in Palo Alto: "There were some mean people in Mexico who wanted to take everything we had away from us." The harsher truth is that the Arteaga family patriarch has been kidnapped, putting the lives of the entire clan in peril, forcing them into sudden exile across the United States and as far as Spain. Narrated in alternating perspectives, "Barefoot Dogs" is a deeply moving chronicle of one family's collective devastation, full of remarkable wisdom and humor, yet unflinching in its portrayal of the horrors sweeping contemporary Mexico. The book opens in the enchanted era before the patriarch's disappearance, as his teenage grand-daughter prepares to summer in Italy. Between private Italian lessons, she and her friends dally among Mexico City's bohemians, "a new and unexplored world within the same city. ... We feel as if we're crossing an invisible fence, trespassing into a forbidden side of ourselves: messier, wilder, sexier." Ruiz-Camacho takes class distinctions head-on, with characters clear and unashamed of their social position and the advantages - and disadvantages - it brings. Laura, the patriarch's daughter, displaced to Austin, confides to the young lover she meets at a laundromat, "We're raised to fulfill our big fat last name's expectations, not to make sense of ourselves." Silvia, Don Arteaga's forlorn mistress, yearns to tell her illegitimate son the truth about his father: "He loved us the same way people like him love pedigree dogs, expensive cars, time-shares in Acapulco." For all its class consciousness, the collection risks caricaturing its large population of servants (or "domestics," as one character calls them), who live only to take care of the narrators. Yet this turns out to provide one of the author's many profound and wrenching social insights: Even if a child chooses to sleep in the maid's bed rather than the parents', the household employees who've reared these kids since birth remain unknowable and expendable. And Ruiz-Camacho shows us that the trauma of Arteaga's kidnapping belongs to them as much as to his heirs. In "Deers," for instance, one of the most affecting stories, the former maid Susy offers an exquisite, feverishly wrought tale of adventure, friendship and heartache. Ruiz-Camacho's prose is muscular and evocative. He revels in intimately observed moments and sharp but nuanced characterizations, as when Laura's boyfriend praises her "helplessness ... wrapped in a thin layer of arrogance," or a first-time father beholds his newborn baby as "purple and swollen, but already a mirror." Nor does he spare us the terrifying images permeating Mexico City; we see Silvia struggling to shield her young son's eyes from "dozens of human limbs that hung from the trees by the side of the Periférico, as if severed arms and legs from bodies no one would ever locate were the city's newest fruit." In the haunting title story, which closes the collection, Don Arteaga's son rises at dawn and takes in Madrid, where he, his wife and their baby have become immigrants, in a limbo of shock and loss. He tells us: "There are no curtains or blinds on the windows because we don't care about privacy and security here. We don't have to worry about that anymore." And because we have come so far with this family, we know that no matter how perfect their refuge, true peace may never be theirs again. PATRICIA ENGEL is the author of a story collection, "Vida," and a novel, "It's Not Love, It's Just Paris."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [April 5, 2015]
Review by Booklist Review

When the patriarch (José Victoriano Arteaga) of an upper-middle-class Mexico City family goes missing, the lives of his family are more than disrupted. The uncertainty surrounding his disappearance forces the family to question their own safety and causes many members to relocate out of the country. Ruiz-Camacho builds his novel out of a collection of stories, each following a different affected individual. The stories move roughly chronologically, giving readers the opportunity to see Arteaga's granddaughter's reaction to her grandfather's disappearance in the first story, and Arteaga's son's reluctant acceptance of his father's fate, after the details of his disappearance begin to unravel, in the last. Ranging from the confusion that Arteaga's grandchildren feel about moving and the fear his children possess in regard to their safety to the struggles the family's housekeepers face in starting over in a new country and the resentment that Arteaga's mistress feels toward her lover's abandonment, Barefoot Dogs offers readers a relatable experience of dealing with unexpected tragedy, even when framed by a less-than-relatable situation. An extremely promising debut.--FioRito, Nicole Copyright 2015 Booklist

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

When these linked short stories begin, things are still good for the extended Arteaga family. For teenaged Fernanda, who narrates the first story, it's the "year everybody's planning to spend the summer in Italy," everybody being her and her affluent friends, none of whom has ever taken a cab or subway in their native Mexico. But then Fernanda's grandfather, patriarch José Victoriano Arteaga, is kidnapped, and body parts start arriving in the mail. The rest of the stories chart the family's dissolution as they (along with their maids-who are like family, except, of course, for all the ways they aren't) flee Mexico City. In an assured debut, Ruiz-Camacho inhabits the minds of Arteaga's extended family, as well as his mistress and the more peripheral characters of his life. In exile in Austin, Madrid, New York, and Palo Alto, the Artegas struggle with the frightening situation, as well as their sense of themselves and the world. A grandson tries to make friends in his new school; a son can't be a father to his own newborn; a daughter takes a lover; secrets and loss are everywhere. Experiencing the ways in which various family members cope-or fail to-with their new reality makes for gripping, somber reading. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Although it's not immediately apparent, this debut collection features linked stories about a wealthy Mexican family whose members scatter abroad after the kidnapping of patriarch José Victoriano Arteaga. Each story lands like a punch, from the opening tale about young people crossing invisible boundaries in Mexico City to Arteaga's son wandering the sizzling streets of Madrid with his dog, Zurbarán, in search of his father. VERDICT Energetic and colloquially written, this engaging collection shows what it's like to live in a world that isn't quite yours. © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

When the patriarch of a large, wealthy clan in Mexico City is kidnapped, it leads the family to an unintentional diaspora.Mexican-born, Texas-based journalist Ruiz-Camacho shows a wealth of talent in this fiction debut, a collection of interconnected stories about the blowback from the disappearance of Jos Victoriano Arteaga, a wealthy Mexican citizen. In the opener, "It Will Be Awesome Before Spring," the don's 19-year-old granddaughter, Fernanda, offers a flashback about what happened when the patriarch disappeared after leaving his office for lunch one day in 2004: "It is the year all the members of my family will end up fleeing Mexico, following Grandpa's disappearance, but at that point I don't know for sure what's happened to him." Ruiz-Camacho captures a younger child's take on grief and misunderstanding in "Okie," written from the point of view of 8-year-old Bernardo. An outstanding offshoot from the main plot comes in "Origami Prunes," in which a young consulate officer named Plutarco Mills meets the don's daughter Laura in a laundromat and starts an affair with her only to meet her daughter Nicolasa years later under sad, strange circumstances. There's a funny, almost theatrical exchange in "I Clench My Hands Into Fists and They Look Like Someone Else's," in which two siblings, Homero and Ximena, have holed up in a Manhattan flea trap to pop pills, snipe at each other and dream of better days ahead. Another offshoot, "Better Latitude," examines the unique heartache carried by Silvia Guevara, mistress to Don Victoriano and the mother of his 6-year-old son, Laureano, to whom she must explain where Daddy went. Finally, Ruiz-Camacho sticks the landing in the title story, transposing son Martin's trip to the vet in Madrid with his memories of the don's body parts' arriving in the mail, ending with a conversation with his father's ghost. A nimble debut that demonstrates not a singular narrative voice but a realistic chorus of them. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Barefoot Dogs IT WILL BE AWESOME BEFORE SPRING It is the year everybody's planning to spend the summer in Italy. Tammy and Sash will take a photography workshop in Florence and Jen will take a cruise around the Mediterranean with her family, and mine will rent a house in Tuscany. We've already made arrangements to meet in Milan for a couple of days and perhaps drive to Portofino and hang out there for another day or two--Italian highways are the best, we've heard, and no one cares about speed limits there, same as here, but highways there don't suck, so everybody agrees it will be awesome. Before spring breaks, we're already taking Italian conversation over cappuccinos at Klein's on Avenida Masaryk once a week with this beautiful middle-aged Genovese woman I remember as Giovanna but I'm sure that was not her name. She looks like Diane von Furstenberg when she was in her prime, only with much less expensive clothes. She wound up in Mexico because she met some guy in Cancún, and has been trying to make a living here since, teaching Italian and any other language to foreign executives, because she's a polyglot. Whenever we want a break from class we ask her to tell us stories about her other students--she's an avid raconteur too, so she can talk and talk for hours on end--and she comes up with the wildest tales. My memories of that year have started to blur and I can only recall the story of the Danish executive who's taking English conversation and fashions a grinding, horrible accent, our teacher says, flapping her branchy hands over our cappuccino glasses as if they're logs on fire and she's trying to turn them into embers. Irregular nouns and verbs make this poor Danish lady crazy, Diane--let's call the Italian polyglot that--admits with a frown that makes the crisp features of her face look worn rather than sophisticated, so every time Diane asks her to talk about her morning routine, the Danish lady says, "Well, firrst ting rright out of my bet, I torouffly wash my teets." It is the year there's only room for Italy in our minds, and so every Thursday evening after Italian conversation, we thunder into Mixup and sort through the World Music section, looking for CDs from Italian pop singers as if we're British schoolgirls and the Beatles' real names are Umberto Tozzi and Gianluca Grignani and Claudio Baglioni and Zucchero. We buy every Italian tune we can, from Lucio Dalla's number ones to the latest from Laura Pausini--we only buy her albums in Italian, though, and pretend to ignore the appalling fact that her songs in Spanish are as mainstream as Luis Miguel's--and spend long weekend hours at Sash's or Tammy's learning cheesy lyrics by heart, mastering our accents, dreaming of Milan. It is the year we check out all of Fellini from the university's library and watch Il Postino and La Vita è Bella and Cinema Paradiso so many times we can reenact scenes from those flicks on the sidewalks of Paseo de la Reforma at 4:00 a.m. after partying at Bulldog, where we dance on the tables, vodka tonics in hand, lip-synching to No Doubt's "It's My Life" or Outkast's "Hey Ya!" or Nirvana's classic "Smells Like Teen Spirit," thinking how cheap and tacky these songs are, how insignificant they sound compared to the subtle honeylike grandeur of ­Fiordaliso's "Non Voglio Mica la Luna." It is the year we take internships in museums across the city because we dream of becoming artists after college. Sash and Tammy land gigs at Centro de la Imagen, and Jen at Museo de Arte Moderno, and I get the best of all, at Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso, helping to curate the first-ever solo exhibit of David Hockney in Mexico, which is beyond amazing and makes my three stupendous friends rattle with jealousy. I boast about my job even though all I do for those ten hours a week is mail invitations for the opening reception, organize large boxes of leaflets into brick-thick stacks, fax documents overseas, drag superheavy crates to storage--tedious and exhausting chores I've never had to do before, the novelty of which feels exciting and paramount. I feel like I'm carrying Hockney's posterity on my shoulders, like his success in Mexico depends on me. I get a taste of what the real city feels like, and I think it's not as bad as it looks from the outside. It is the year I'm nineteen. It is the year life will change for us, but we don't know any of that yet. It is the year we meet people that don't live in the same neighborhoods as us, Polanco, Lomas, Tecamachalco. It is the year we get to know real artists who rent studios in dangerous districts on the other side of the city, and it is the year we socialize with historians and anthropologists and performance artists and book editors who live paycheck to paycheck and don't have cars; these are fascinating, glamorous people who ride the subway and take taxicabs. It is a new and unexplored world within the same city we were born and have always lived, and every time we venture into it we feel as if we're crossing an invisible fence, trespassing into a forbidden side of ourselves: messier, wilder, sexier. As we start mingling with the native people of that other city, we learn it is also the year everybody's talking about kidnappings; the wave of panic of the late nineties is back with a vengeance, they announce. They're all sharing the stories they've heard, gory details about what's happened to this or that friend the last time they grabbed a taxicab. At a party in an abandoned building behind the Metropolitan Cathedral, the associate curator of Viceregal Art at Museo de la Ciudad de México tells the fresh story of a dear friend of his: It's around nine o'clock at night and this woman, a young photographer who had just returned from the Sierra Tarahumara, where she'd been working on a multimedia project to premiere at Art Basel in Miami, catches a cab, a little green-and-white Beetle, on the corner of Álvaro Obregón and Frontera, and asks the driver to take her to Barracuda Bar, "The one by Parque España," she specifies. A friend of hers is celebrating his birthday there--actually, the very curator who's telling the story--she explains to the driver in a jolly mood. The guy pulls resolutely into the traffic and feigns interest in her conversation, but when they're only one block into the ride he halts at a stoplight and a couple of fat guys step into the taxicab and fill the minuscule space of the backseat on either side of her. "My friend hasn't realized what's going on yet when these motherfuckers start beating the shit out of her," the curator says, "fists into her torso and her face as if softening a pillow, like when you're getting ready for a sweet night's sleep. Next they take her on a merry-go-round of ATMs," he explains, "forcing her to withdraw all the cash she can with a knife pinching her lower back, until she reaches the daily limit on the three cards she carries in her purse. The guy at the wheel says they need to wait until midnight to continue, and in the meantime they drive my friend around Colonia Roma and Colonia Doctores, just making time, listening to old ranchera music, whistling to the rusty tunes that pop from the speakers," the curator says. "Then one of the other guys drops something like, 'I'm fucking starving, aren't you guys?' and so they stop by a taco sudado stand to grab a bite. The hungry one takes everybody's order but my friend's," the curator says, "and out he goes to fetch the food while the other two stay inside, watching over her to make sure she doesn't escape. The hungry one comes back with a bunch of tacos wrapped in brown paper in one hand and three bottles of Coca-Cola dangling from the other," the curator says, and I can imagine the scene clearly, the sound of soda bottles clinking against each other unnervingly. "The driver pulls back into the traffic jam and the three motherfuckers have dinner while cruising streets," the curator continues, "these three pigs and my friend crammed into this little Beetle taxicab that reeks of damp taco and sweat of swine. They finish dinner but it isn't midnight yet, and they're growing bored. A couple minutes later one of them says something like, 'Hey, guys, we didn't have dessert! What if we all fuck this little cunt instead?' The three of them take a look at her, as if considering if she's worth the effort. 'Nah, she's not that hot,' the driver says, but they have nothing else to do until midnight, so in the end they all vote for the go," says the curator with a broken voice. He has to pause, he looks shaken, like he won't be able to continue the story, and everybody around him is silent looking at him with wide eyes, everybody thinking, This is a joke, right? and I feel weird because the story is so horrible it can't be true, but I realize that this is what living the real life of the city must be like, and this makes me feel grown up and wild and independent. I look at Jen and Tammy and Sash, who are listening as well, and I catch the confused signals on their faces, fascination, horror, and disbelief in their eyes. "They drive off into what looks like Colonia Portales and they park somewhere on a lightless street," the curator finally says, "and they take turns and get her as dessert. At some point midnight arrives and they resume their pilgrimage to the ATMs, but my friend's credit and debit cards are maxed out in the first attempt, and rage overtakes them. 'You're fucking broke, bitch?' the driver yells at her." The curator says his friend doesn't reply because, at that point, she's realized that crying or begging won't make a difference. She wants to believe they have nothing else to take from her. "They pull up somewhere around Eje Central, and she seems to be right because they swing the taxicab door open and throw her onto the sidewalk. She's already lying on the ground when one of them steps out of the cab and pulls down the zipper of his pants and pisses all over her. She doesn't remember feeling anything at that moment," the curator says--everybody around him, including myself, is now looking at him with tears in our eyes--"she only gets to hear the other motherfuckers cracking up, howling in celebration inside the taxicab. The guy finishes, squats down by her side, and whispers in her ear, 'We're keeping your purse, muffin, so if we feel like visiting you one of these days we know where you live.' He gets back in the cab, and she watches from the corner of her eye as the little Beetle fades away. And here comes the worst part of the whole thing," the curator says. "A sense of glee she'd never experienced before takes over her when she sees them disappear into the night." Excerpted from Barefoot Dogs: Stories by Antonio Ruiz-Camacho All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.