Lucas Guevara

$12.95

by Alirio Díaz Guerra 

ISBN: 978-1-55885-390-4
Publication Date: April 30, 2003
Bind: Trade Paperback
Pages: 336

The English-language version of one of the earliest novels of immigration to the U.S.

Look Inside

 

Available

Lucas Guevara is the first Spanish-language novel of immigration to the United States. Published in the United States in 1914 by Colombian emigré Díaz Guerra, the novel establishes the structure and formula that numerous other Spanish-language narratives produced in this country would take up over the course of the twentieth century.

Freshly arrived from the pristine countryside of South America, Lucas quickly becomes a victim of the modern Metropolis, its treacherous rogues, and its immoral women. Lucas finds no streets paved with gold. Instead he ultimately succumbs to the pleasures of the flesh and becomes an unscrupulous predator himself.

From Lucas Guevara on, the Hispanic novel of immigration developed as a counter-narrative to the myths of the American Dream and the melting pot. Especially noteworthy are Díaz Guerra’s satirical descriptions of the night life in the Bowery and the culture of New York boarding houses during the period when at least forty percent of the city’s inhabitants were immigrants. Kanellos and Hernández trace the author’s development as a writer and study Lucas Guevara in the context of Hispanic history and immigrant literature.

“An important addition to a comprehensive collection of U.S. / Latino Literature.”–Counterpoise

NICOLÁS KANELLOS is the Brown Foundation professor of Hispanic Studies at the University of Houston and founder-director of Arte Público Press, the most accomplished publisher of U.S. Hispanic literature. He is a fellow of the Ford, Lilly and Gulbenkian Foundations and of the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 1988 he was awarded the White House Hispanic Heritage Award, and in 1989 the American Book Award in the Publisher/Editor category. Author of five books on U.S. Hispanic literature and theatre, Dr. Kanellos was appointed in 1994 by President Bill Clinton and confirmed by the U.S. Senate to serve on the National Council on the Humanities. He also directs the Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Project, a national project to locate, study, index and commit to print and electronic media the whole of U.S. Hispanic literature from colonial times to 1960.