A candid, savvy, inspiring, and often hilarious memoir by one of America’s most fearless political leaders. Beloved by the immigrants and working people whose rights he has championed, twelve-term Congressman Luis Gutierrez is, among Latinos and along with Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the most recognized Hispanic public figure in America. Here Gutierrez recounts his life between two worlds: too Puerto Rican in America, where he was born and yet was told to "go back to where you came from"; too American in Puerto Rico, where he was ridiculed as a "gringo" who couldn’t speak Spanish. For much of his early life, he seemed like the last person who would rise to national prominence. Yet his tremendous will and resilience shaped his varied experiences—from picking coffee beans to driving a cab—into one of the most surprising careers in American politics. He campaigned for Chicago’s first black mayor, Harold Washington. Someone threw a Molotov cocktail through the window of his house, and he only grew more committed to reform. Tested in the crucible of the notoriously tough Chicago city council, he earned the nickname "El Gallito": the little fighting rooster. Gutierrez was one of the first Latino public figures to support gay rights; he led the fight to cut Congressional paychecks, hashed out legislation with both Ted Kennedy and John McCain, and fought with Newt Gingrich and George W. Bush. Despite his strong support for Barack Obama in two elections, he was arrested twice while protesting for immigrants in front of the Obama White House. From recollections of his failures as a teenage activist to his crackling observations of the nautical décor in Kennedy’s office and the white-gloved waiters of the Speaker’s dining room, Gutierrez is as endearing to the reader as he is sometimes maddening to his colleagues, inspiring us all to stand up for our rights and for those of others.
A World Less Away is a honeycomb, blackbox, dream codex and memory palace. These poems traffic in the interstices of our lives where the quotidian is imbued with meaning and hums with metaphysical unrest. By turns existential, surreal and elegiac, the poems in this collection take swerves that are sure to transport the reader to the oneiric side of reality while never losing sight that "flesh was the first simile/we were given, /to feel, conjure, /never truly inhabit.
Benito Céspedes es un investigador privado que sobrevive en la Barcelona actual a fuerza de hacer trabajos de poca monta: principalmente, husmear en asuntos de adulterio. Abstemio, no fumador y poco amigo de la violencia (y con un extraordinario sentido del humor), Céspedes discurre por la profesión de detective sin pretender llamar mucho la atención… hasta que, de pronto, un salvaje asesinato que incumbe a los peores elementos de la ciudad le obliga a incursionarse en un terreno que nunca hubiera sospechado. Narrada con un estilo agilísimo y, sobre todo, con unos diálogos especialmente brillantes y un humor magnífico, "Un caniche blanco muerto" es una novedosa revisión del viejo mito del detective privado. Se trata de contemplar un oficio tan literario a ras de tierra, en medio del trasiego cotidiano que si bien hace descender la épica varios grados, confiere a la narración un verismo y una veracidad que justifica cada página. La pequeña odisea de Benito Céspedes por conseguir secretaria, entenderse con su socio, investigar en un campo de chumberas… es un soplo de aire fresco sobre los clichés de la novela negra y, sobre todo, da pie a una obra muy divertida y, cómo no, una obra que mantiene la tensión.
Two American soldiers, back from two tours in Afghanistan, go to Acapulco to decompress before starting college. While out clubbing, they have a disagreement with a cocky Mexican. Fists fly, honor tested, loyalty displayed, and a new friendship is forged. Mexico is being swept by a tropical storm in the Pacific while a hurricane rages in the Atlantic, both weather fronts bringing non-stop torrential rains in Acapulco. The country is paralyzed. The new friends are put to the test when they cross paths with a drug lord who is also in the human trafficking business. Their warrior instinct leads them on a hunt from Acapulco to Mexico City and on to Washington DC where they uncover a dark side to Washington politics.
A timely book for those who enjoy a liberal perspective on both religious and political issues of today. A unique and well-balanced work which focuses on the true Christ and what he was when he came.
I traveled over the course of almost two years with photographer Estanis Núñez, an old friend of mine, just like we used to in our rock'n'roll days, taking photos, eating and drinking together. This book contains 14 profiles of vignerons, each of them different, spanning most of the wine-producing regions of Spain. There are others, but this is my personal selection. Their profiles talk about the history, landscape, vineyards, cuisine, passion and tradition of their region. You won't find tannins, anthocyanins, vintages, points or tasting notes here. I am hardly going to talk about wine at all. But you will find the often-forgotten human side and the context of what is in the bottle, including local cuisine (where wine plays an important role) as well as each winegrower's personal take on it. . Their main aim in life is to portray the uniqueness of their vineyards, villages and landscapes through a bottle of wine. Wine that can transport you back to the time and place it was produced the moment you drink it. These are the new vignerons. A new generation of Spanish winegrowers.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.