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Paperback Suffer Smoke Book

ISBN: 1558851682

ISBN13: 9781558851689

Suffer Smoke

Suffer Smoke , a bittersweet collection of short stories, is centered on the copper mining town of Morenci Arizona. A company town, Morenci was home to generations of Mexican Americans. In the late... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$14.39
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Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Suffer Smoke is for real

Suffer Smoke is delightful book full of interesting mining history with a gracious salting of local folklore. The book isn't organized like a novel so you can pick it up, read a few chapters, then put it back down for another day. The descriptions of how the largest and wealthiest copper producer in this fee world generally treated it immigrant workers illustrates social disparities found similarly in The Grapes of Wrath. Having grown up in the same town, only many years later, I found my mind wandering the streets of my childhood but walking in the footsteps of the ghostly characters.

"Suffer Smoke" a Pleasure to Read

Every so often I fall in love with an author's work; it doesn't happen too often and when it does it's an experience I cherish. "Suffer Smoke," a collection of short stories by Elena Díaz Björkquist, kept me turning pages three nights in a row this week. Díaz Björkquist is a gifted story teller who in this lovely tome has turned her sights back to Morenci, Arizona, where four generations of her family worked the copper mines. Díaz Björkquist's prose is lively and direct, breathing color and life into issues that in lesser hands could seem preachy. Her characters range from the tragically unforgettable Reyna"The Hershey Bar Queen" to a spunky first grader who refuses to be forced to speak only English on the school play yard. They include men such as Pedro Garcia, who earned a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star but couldn't get a hamburger at a greasy-spoon diner. Díaz Björkquist also follows members of the Aguirre family through several generations, as they are unfairly forced to leave Morenci time and time again. Díaz Björkquist holds her magnifying glass close and does notflinch when it reveals unflattering behavior, such as greed, machismo or incest. Oppression is a constant underlying theme but the stories don't come across as heavy handed. Instead, you feel for the characters -- and for all of the people in Morenci and other such places who have had to struggle with discrimination, lack of opportunity and chauvinism. And perhaps more importantly, you admire their strength, their nobility and their ability to survive and thrive. In her preface, Díaz Björkquist writes: "Morenci is a spirit town. It lives in the memories of those who grew up there and it infiltrates our dreams. What is it about this town that continues to hold such power over us even after its demise? It's a question I ponder each time I awaken from a dream -- Morenci. Perhaps it's the spirits of people who were born there, the ones who worked in the mine until they died. No longer having a town to haunt -- they haunt us, the survivors, by recreating Morenci in our dreams." If you have a chance, read this book. I recommend it highly! By Lavonne Luquis © 1996 LatinoLink

"Suffer Smoke" a Pleasure to Read

Every so often I fall in love with an author's work; it doesn't happen too often and when it does it's an experience I cherish. "Suffer Smoke," a collection of short stories by Elena Díaz Björkquist, kept me turning pages three nights in a row this week. Díaz Björkquist is a gifted story teller who in this lovely tome has turned her sights back to Morenci, Arizona, where four generations of her family worked the copper mines. Díaz Björkquist's prose is lively and direct, breathing color and life into issues that in lesser hands could seem preachy. Her characters range from the tragically unforgettable Reyna"The Hershey Bar Queen" to a spunky first grader who refuses to be forced to speak only English on the school play yard. They include men such as Pedro Garcia, who earned a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star but couldn't get a hamburger at a greasy-spoon diner. Díaz Björkquist also follows members of the Aguirre family through several generations, as they are unfairly forced to leave Morenci time and time again. Díaz Björkquist holds her magnifying glass close and does notflinch when it reveals unflattering behavior, such as greed, machismo or incest. Oppression is a constant underlying theme but the stories don't come across as heavy handed. Instead, you feel for the characters -- and for all of the people in Morenci and other such places who have had to struggle with discrimination, lack of opportunity and chauvinism. And perhaps more importantly, you admire their strength, their nobility and their ability to survive and thrive. In her preface, Díaz Björkquist writes: "Morenci is a spirit town. It lives in the memories of those who grew up there and it infiltrates our dreams. What is it about this town that continues to hold such power over us even after its demise? It's a question I ponder each time I awaken from a dream -- Morenci. Per
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