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Retablos

Stories from a Life Lived along the Border

Audiobook
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Seminal moments, rites of passage, crystalline vignettes—a memoir about growing up brown at the US/Mexico border

The tradition of retablo painting dates back to the Spanish Conquest in both Mexico and the US Southwest. Humble ex-votos, retablos are usually painted on repurposed metal, and in one small tableau they tell the story of a crisis and offer thanks for its successful resolution.

In this uniquely framed memoir, playwright Octavio Solis channels his youth in El Paso, Texas. Like traditional retablos, the rituals of childhood and rites of passage are remembered as singular, dramatic events, self-contained episodes with life-changing reverberations.

Living in a home just a mile from the Rio Grande, Octavio is a skinny brown kid on the border, growing up among those who live there, and those passing through on their way north. From the first terrible self-awareness of racism to inspired afternoons playing air trumpet with Herb Alpert, from an innocent game of hide-and-seek to the discovery of a Mexican girl hiding in the cotton fields, Solis reflects on the moments of trauma and transformation that shaped him into a man.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 5, 2018
      In this debut memoir, playwright Solis delivers top-notch vignettes of his youth with riveting imagery and empathy, recounting—and embellishing, he says—memories of growing up brown in El Paso, Tex. Framed as a series of retablos (“a devotional painting a dire event... which the person survives thanks to the intercession of the Divine. At once visual and literary, they record the transgression, the divine mediation and the offering of thanks in a single frame, a kind of flash-fiction account of that person’s electrifying, life-altering event”), the chapters capture poignant scenes with both the innocence of childhood and mature hindsight: after recounting mispronouncing “ocean” in front of his whole class, Solis concludes, “To get the pronunciation right in the end, I had to get it wrong in the beginning.” That mature perspective is alive to structural injustice: of discovering a border crosser during a game of hide-and-seek, Solis notes, “I’m hiding for fun. She’s hiding for her life.” He displays his talent in startling descriptions: the “dog who wears his tongue on the side of his mouth like a scarf,” the act of “taking English and dropping its chassis and adding some hot rims.” These brilliantly told stories of missteps and redemption are a treat.

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  • English

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