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Posts Tagged ‘Sofia Quintero

Interview With Sofia Quintero

1:38 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Books|Culture|society|youth · Comments Off

12 May 2010

I shared earlier last month about Sofia Quintero’s latest and first Young Adult (YA) novel that was released called Efrain’s Secret. Her book centers the experiences of a young Latino living in the Bronx. The book is in stores now. Sofia has a sample chapter available for readers to check out prior to purchase.

Sofia agreed to be interviewed about her book for the readers at Love Isn’t Enough who are mainly parents interested in discussing and addressing various topics, most especially race and ethnicity. Here’s a bit of what Sofia shared in our interview:

What was your motivation for writing Efrain’s Secret?

The story for Efrain’s Secret has been incubating within me since 1985. That summer, a high school senior from Harlem named Edmund Perry was shot to death by a plain clothes police officer in Morningside Park. It caused a great deal of controversy because Eddie had just graduated from Philips Exeter and was going to start college at Stanford that fall. And yet the police officer and almost two dozen witnesses stated that Eddie and his brother had mugged and assaulted him. It was such a tragedy. No winners in that one. This was the summer before my senior year of high school. I was an honor student myself, hoping to attend an Ivy League college, but I wasn’t oblivious or immune to the forces that could derail me. I had classmates like Eddie who were leading double lives, and this fascinated me. What compels people to attempt to reconcile what society insists is irreconcilable? This and related questions are recurring themes in my work, and Efrain’s Secret is my first exploration of this theme from the perspective of a person who is young and male.

Many of the instructors that Efrain has are women, Sra. Polanco, his Spanish teacher, he identifies as having educated him on his own radical cultural history as a Caribbean and Latino man through using various forms of texts in her classroom (books, films, music, etc.). Did you plan to have the women in the novel be the primary people who transmit culture and communal history in the book?

I sure did, and then some. I see Baraka playing this role, too, but he is away at school acquiring his own knowledge. There’s much ado about young men of color going astray because they do not have male role models in their lives, it bothers me when this is driven by a sexist devaluation of what female adults can offer boys. Sure, we lose too many boys because their fathers and other male role models are not present in their lives or are present in a toxic way. But there also are many amazing men who were raised, taught and otherwise loved and nurture primarily by women. For the record, I think boys and girls alike need both masculine and feminine adult influence in their lives. Again, influence of a certain type. I know quite a few men who are healthy and happy because (1) a dysfunctional parent kept his or her distance and (2) other loving adults filled the void. I hope the adults who read Efrain’s Secret have dialogues, among other things, about whether Rubio’s fleeting presence in Efrain’s life – especially given the choices he made as a husband and father – is truly a “better than nothing” proposition. Was this a model of masculinity that served Efrain? What kind of difference might Rubio have made if he were a better financial provider yet still the same social model? What if he were a different social figure yet no better an economic influence? What kind of difference would that have made if any? I myself don’t have definitive answers on any of these questions, but that’s why I raise them. I’d love to hear what others think.

Read the full interview here. And have the young person in your life meet Sofia this week in NYC at Latin@ Young Adult Panel in East Harlem.

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I wish this event was a tour that would stop in every community! Alas, it is a one day event that is occurring in NYC. My homegirl Sofia Quintero, who as a new Young Adult (YA) novel out focusing on young men of Color called EFRAIN’S SECRET (in stores now), has collaborated on creating the following event. I plan to attend and hope some NYC VL readers can as well.
If you are outside of NYC there are other ways to participate, such as supporting the writings of Latino authors that center our youth in their craft by asking your local independent bookstore to carry their books and then buy them! I speak from experience, their books make some of the BEST gifts as I’ve given them to several youth in my life.

Join Elisha Miranda, Torrey Maldonado and Sofia Quintero as they read from their work, discuss writing young adult fiction and sign their novels. Our guest of honor will be Nicholasa Mohr, a trailblazer in the young adult genre. Thursday, May 13, 2010 from 4 – 6 PM at the East Harlem Cafe (1651 Lexington Avenue @104th Street). No RSVP necessary, and we encourage you to bring the young people love. If you can’t make it, we hope that you will a least “share” and spread the word.

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Ivy League Homegirl Sofia Quintero has published her first Young Adult (YA) novel and it is in stores now! Sofia is also my homegirl and I’ve read all her books including this one (excerpts from an interview we had forthcoming). EFRAIN’S SECRET is the story of Efrain, a Puerto Rican-Dominican high school senior living in the South Bronx and preparing for graduation from the Pedro Albizu Campos HS and seeking and Ivy League education. Here’s the book synopsis from the publisher’s website:

Ambitious high school senior Efrain Rodriguez dreams of escaping the South Bronx for an Ivy League college like Harvard or Yale. But how is his family going to afford to pay for a prestigious university when Moms has to work insane hours to put food on the table as it is? And Efrain wouldn’t dare ask that good-for-nothing father of his who has traded his family in for younger models. Left with few options, Efrain chooses to do something he never thought he would. He embarks on a double life—honor student by day, drug peddler at night—convinced that by temporarily capitulating to society’s negative expectations of a boy like him, he can eventually defy them.

Sofia Quintero makes a stunning debut writing for young adults with this gritty, complex, and real exploration of the life of an urban teen whose attempt to leave one world behind for a better one could cost him everything.

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PandoraLogoGray.jpgStarting today through Sunday, July 6th, Sister Outsider presents Pandora’s : Ten Monologues Open the Box of Queer Latin@ Identities.

Pandora’s ten diverse monologues, seven short films woven
together with music to represent different queer identities from
diverse ethnic and identity backgrounds (bisexual, transgender,
lesbian, questioning, homeless, immigrant, etc.) Its debut marks a
breakthrough in visibility and expression in the Latin@ queer community.

PANDORA’S TRAILER

For information on tickets check after the jump.

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Hola!

VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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