I want to thank the reviewers of Amazon.com’s VINE program who chose to read advanced copies of Marcelo in the Real World and reviewed the book before its actual publication. It is an amazing thing for an author to see how the book takes a life of its own after it is published and how, the book becomes the “property” of the reader, subject to the reader’s personal interpretation and appreciation. One student who read Marcelo for Donna Freitas’ religion class at BU asked me what I hoped the reader would take from the book. I was aware that a long time went by before I was able to answer. The delay came not because I was thinking about what to say but because I was a little embarrassed by what my heart said I should answer: What I most hoped the reader to take from the book was for Marcelo to become real for the reader, someone they would take along with them forever as part of their life the way, say, I take Don Quixote with me. I want to say thank-you the amazon.com advanced reviewers for opening their hearts and minds, for reading the book and letting Marcelo into their lives. I wish I could respond specifically about some of the points raised, the good ones and the critical ones, but there comes a time when the author needs to let go of the book and let it make its own way in the real world.
January 14, 2009
January 9, 2007
Recent Reviews
From: Teenreadstoo.comÂ
BEHIND THE EYES by Francisco X. Stork
Category: Â Contemporary
Age Recommendation: Â Grades 9+
Release Date: Â 6/1/06
Publisher: Â Dutton
Reviewed by: Â Jocelyn Pearce
Rating: Â 5 Stars
Sixteen-year-old Hector Robles’s life will never be the same again. Living his entire life in the projects of El Paso, Texas, he’s always stayed away from the gangs–but his brother Filiberto brought an end to that. A little more than a year after the death of their father, Hector, Fili and their younger sister Aurora have a run-in with some members of the Discipulos. Hector would like to keep out of their way after that, as would Aurora, but Fili sets his sights on Gloria…Who just happens to be dating Chava, leader of the Discipulos.Fili just can’t let it go. His conflict with Chava escalates until one night, he ends up dead. In less than a year and a half, Hector has lost his older brother and his father. Even though it’s not something he could have imagined himself doing, Hector goes after Chava.Chava does more damage to Hector than Hector does to him, leaving Hector with various rather serious injuries, including the loss of his hearing in one ear. When he recovers, a social worker has some rather grave news for him: Chava wants him dead. The only way he can keep safe, as well as protect his mother and sister, is to leave town. Mrs. Garza, the social worker, tells him there’s one good place for him to go now. He’s charged with the aggravated assault of Chava, and there’s a school in another city that accepts kids who have been in trouble with the law. There, he’ll be safe from the Discipulos, he’ll get a good education, and his mother and sister won’t be involved with the gangs anymore. Hector makes a decision: he’ll go to Furman.There, he makes friends with a colorful cast of characters, and could maybe have a fresh start and a new life…If his past can ever stop following him.
 BEHIND THE EYES is divided up into three parts. The first and last part deal with Hector’s time after his brother’s death, and the second part takes place before Fili’s “accident.” Francisco X. Stork tells the story of whatever is going on in each section of the book in the past tense, and flashbacks are in the present tense, which threw me a little at first, but I quickly got used to it. The non-chronological division of the book was also a little odd, but I did like the way it was divided, and, in the end, it made sense.Stork is a brilliant writer, and BEHIND THE EYES is a page-turner. It’s told in a fresh, captivating voice, and the story itself is a fascinating one. It was inspired by Stork’s own time living in the projects of El Paso, and some of the Chicano teenagers he knew there. That Stork knows what he’s writing really shows, and it adds an extra dimension to an already wonderful book. The characters are diverse, fascinating and believable, each one well-thought out and three-dimensional. It’s a character-driven story, and a fantastic one.  This is definitely one of my favorites of 2006.Â
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