Chronicling a family that lost three sons to a border crossing gone horribly wrong, Martínez travels repeatedly from San Diego to the city of Cherán, in the state of Michoacán, about 200 miles west of Mexico City. Though treated by some of the Mexicans he meets as more of a gringo than a norteño
(a Mexican who has lived in the north), Martínez, an American of Mexican emigré parents, gets terrifically close to his subjects, following them from stultifying poverty in Mexico to mortally dangerous illegal crossings and harsh and also dangerous (and illegal) work in Arkansas, Connecticut, Missouri and California. Martínez draws a wealth of social, ethnic, linguistic and economic nuance in completely absorbing narratives. Each of the 13 chapters begins with a facing-page photo by Joseph Rodriguez (with whom Martínez collaborated on East Side Stories),
showing us the cholos
(gang members), coyotes
(crossing guides) and pollos
("chickens" being led across), and also the everyday people whose lives are spread, one way or another, across the border. Martínez is now at Harvard on a Loeb fellowship, has won an Emmy for his work as a journalist, is associate editor of Pacific News Service and a correspondent for PBS's Religion and Ethics News Weekly. His book is heroic in its honesty and self-examination, and in its determination to tell its story completely and fully. (Oct. 3)
Forecast:With the legal status of Mexican workers apparently on the White House front burner, this will be a huge book for policy wonks; look for terrific reviews, and for Martínez to do many a news chat. This will be a big seller on campus and with left-leaning readers (possibly for years), but the topicality and the quality of the writing make a major breakout likely.