I Used to Be a Superwoman

$8.95

by Gloria Velásquez

ISBN: 978-1-55885-191-7
Publication Date: 1997
Bind: Trade Paperback
Pages: 128

Velásquez’s ardent verses are a pledge reiterating her allegiance to la causa and a call to arms demanding that others perpetuate the struggle. A consummate performer, Velásquez has been successful in transferring onto the printed page the drama of reciting poetry on barrio streets.

 

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The Chicano Movement is not dead. It lives on, fierce and passionate, in the voice and person of Gloria Velásquez. Challenging our complacency, her resonant cries for justice “refuse to be silent/to be buried in obscurity”.

Velásquez has known poverty and discrimination intimately and, like a phoenix from the ashes, she has risen to recognition as an artist, an educator and a leader. But, the poet is as uncompromising with herself as she is with her reader. Refusing to rest on her laurel, her ardent verses are a pledge reiterating her allegiance to la causa and a call to arms demanding that others perpetuate the struggle.

A consummate oral performer and speaker, Velásquez has been uniquely successful in transferring onto the printed page the drama of reciting poetry on barrio streets. These pages burn with the fire of action and commitment.