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The Water Museum

Stories

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This hard-hitting, beautiful short story collection from one of America's preeminent literary voices "reflect[s] both sides of his Mexican-American heritage while stretching the reader's understanding of human boundaries" (Kirkus).
Examining the borders between one nation and another, between one person and another, Urrea reveals his mastery of the short form. This collection includes the Edgar-award winning "Amapola" and his now-classic "Bid Farewell to Her Many Horses," which had the honor of being chosen for NPR's "Selected Shorts" not once but twice.
Suffused with wanderlust, compassion, and no small amount of rock and roll, The Water Museum is a collection that confirms Luis Alberto Urrea as an American master.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The author reads his descriptive stories at a steady, poetic pace for the listener. Luis Alberto Urrea's narration is soft, almost tender, and raspy in parts. He shifts capably between the thoughts and dialogue of male and female characters, handling both with sensitivity. Urrea enjoys his prose, and so does the listener, as he describes the difficult choices facing people who live in the American West. His measured cadence doesn't prepare the reader for the twists and turns in many of the stories, such as the surprise ending in "Amapola," winner of the Edgar award in 2010. In the American West and Southwest of these stories, the landscape is harsh, lives even harsher, but Urrea's narration is as gentle as a whisper. M.R. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 16, 2015
      Urrea’s (The Hummingbird’s Daughter) collection of darkly funny stories explores racial politics and amorphous cultural lines, set primarily in the Southwest. In the title story, a small town is in the throes of a drought so prolonged that a water museum is created to teach the town’s children about the long-lost resource. During the museum’s reenactment of rain, one student begs, “Stop it, Miss! Oh, stop the rain!” In the Edgar Award–winning story “Amapola,” a white high school boy falls in love with his best friend’s Mexican-American cousin, Amapola. Her very conservative and protective family puts the lover through the ringer to prove his love for Amapola. In “The National City Reparation Society,” Junior and Chango take a canoe fishing and are stopped by border patrolmen. Junior is urged to leave the scene, while Chango is held, sinisterly, behind. Urrea has a wonderful eye for details and captures each story’s context with wonderfully sharp observations: when Junior walks through his old hometown, he sees “the flat old cat carcass they used for home plate.” These stories are vibrant, tender, and invoke a strong sense of place.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2015

      The latest collection from fiction and nonfiction author Urrea (creative writing, Univ. of Illinois, Chicago; The Devil's Highway) presents a series of unresolved endings in the author's classic picturesque prose. Where does recently estranged Hubbard go, in "Taped to the Sky," after his joyride across the United States results in unexpected acquaintances? What is Joey's fate in "Young Man Blues" after he betrays the club his imprisoned dad remains loyal to? Does Dexter Bower, in "The Sous Chefs of Iogua," come to accept the changing demographics of his Iowa town? "Mountains Without Number" begs the question, "Is the town dead when old men die or children leave?" The stories often focus on adjusting to life in the Unites States, on men choosing between being a vato or a gabacho; fans of The Hummingbird's Daughter or Queen of America will already be familiar with Urrea's emphasis on rural life and occasional Mexican slang. Containing ten new stories, this brief yet powerful collection also features the award-winning "Amapola" from the anthology Phoenix Noir, "Bid Farewell to her Many Horses" from Six Kinds of Sky, and "Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush," originally published as a graphic novel in 2010. VERDICT Urrea's well-recommended collection leads readers to feel empathy for each character, deserving or not, and provides a gut-wrenching view of life along the sidelines.--Stephanie Sendaula, Library Journal

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from February 1, 2015
      Urrea, celebrated for his historical sagas (Queen of America, 2011) and nonfiction (The Devil's Highway, 2004), offers 13 stories that reflect both sides of his Mexican-American heritage while stretching the reader's understanding of human boundaries.With spare eloquence, the opening "Mountains Without Number" conjures up a dying town near Idaho Falls, both its stark landscape and aging inhabitants. The language turns lush, Latin and slangy in the next two stories, "The Southside Raza Image Federation Corp of Discovery" and "The National City Reparation Society," which feature the bookish Mexican-American Junior, who doesn't fit in with a white college crowd any more than with the immigrant community he grew up among. The theme of young Anglos straddling class and/or cultural borders occurs, too. The adolescent white narrator of "Amapola" falls in love with a beautiful Mexican girl, naively oblivious to the source of her family's wealth. Joey in "Young Man Blues" learns the reward and price of goodness when caught between loyalty to his elderly middle-class employer and his father's criminal cohorts. While "Carnations" and "The White Girl" are brief snapshots of grief, "The Sous Chefs of Iogua" resonates on multiple levels, exposing the uneasy complexities of Anglo-Mexican relationships in an Iowa farm town. In "Taped to the Sky," a Cambridge academic suffering over an ex-wife takes a cross-country trip to the far west and has a darkly comic encounter with Oglala Sioux Don Her Many Horses, who shows his depth in the volume's bittersweet final story, "Bid Farewell to Her Many Horses," about a white man whose marriage to Don's sister shows the power and limitations of cross-cultural love. "Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush," about a graffiti artist in a Mexican village, was published as a graphic novel in 2010; its magical realism would make it an outlier here if not for the penultimate "Welcome to the Water Museum," a dystopian tale of Western life in an arid future when children consider water an anomaly. Urrea's command of language is matched only by his empathy for his characters.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2015
      The author of numerous fiction and nonfiction titles, including the poetry collection The Tijuana Book of the Dead (2015), Urrea is an established storyteller who blends sympathetic characters with riveting, unexpected plots. An early story in this collection catalogs the hilarious misadventures of Junior and Shadow, two Chicano homeboys who imitate Louie and Clark in a stolen kayak, until Shadow's family gets a visit from ICE. In the next story, Junior and his brother Chango steal abandoned dishwashers and TV sets from foreclosed homes in Arizona. In Taped to the Sky, Don Her Many Horses lends a rifle to Hubbard, a crazed white guy lost near the Oglala reservation, who destroys his ex-wife's Volvo with gunfire. Her Many Horses reappears in another story after the unexpected death of his sister. While a few of these stories appeared in a previous collection (Six Kinds of Sky, 2002), and the story of a mysterious, graffiti-covered Mexican town worked best as a graphic novel (Mr. Mendoza's Paintbrush, 2010), Urrea succeeds in writing unforgettable characters who face desperate, life-changing scenarios.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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