''They had just crossed the bridge into the United States. Their feet were now firmly planted on the soil that was their promised land. They had made it! Blessed be the Virgin of Guadalupe! Now they had no reason to fear the villistas, the carrancistas, the government, or the revolutionaries! Here they could find peace, work, wealth and happiness!' And so begins El sol de Texas, originally published in 1926 in San Antonio, Texas. The novel chronicles the struggles of two Mexican immigrant families, the Garcias and the Quijanos, who fled during the upheaval of the Mexican Revolution in search of a better life in the United States. Their initial hopes - of returning to their homeland with enough money to buy their own piece of land - are worn away by the reality of immigrant life. Unable to speak English, they find themselves at the mercy of unscrupulous work contractors and foremen: forced to work at backbreaking labor picking cotton in the fields, building the burgeoning Southwest railroad system, and working in Gulf Coast oil refineries.' 'Considered the first novel of Mexican immigration, El sol de Texas/Under the Texas Sun depicts the diverse experiences of Mexican immigrants, from those that return to Mexico beaten down by the discrimination and hardship they encounter, to those who persist in their adopted land in spite of the racism they face.'--BOOK JACKET. Una fascinante novela hist?rica sobre la inmigraci?n de mexicanos a Estados Unidos y los efectos sobre la cultura, la historia y los estudios literarios. |