Lone Star Book ReviewsBy Michelle Newby, NBCCContributing Editor

Michelle Newby is contributing editor at Lone Star Literary Life, reviewer for Kirkus, freelance writer, member of the National Book Critics Circle, blogger at www.TexasBookLover.com, and a moderator at the 20th annual Texas Book Festival. Her reviews appear in Pleiades Magazine, Rain Taxi, World Literature Today, High Country News, South85 Journal, The Review Review, Concho River Review, Monkeybicycle, Mosaic Literary Magazine, Atticus Review, and The Collagist.

Lone Star Book Reviews
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Christopher Carmona is a Chican@ Beat poet from the Rio Grande Valley of Deep South Texas. He was a nominee for the Alfredo Cisneros de Miral Foundation Award for Writers in 2011 and a Pushcart Prize nominee in 2013. He has two books of poetry, and I Have Always Been Here. He is currently editing The Beatest State In The Union: An Anthology of Beat Texas Writings with Chuck Taylor and Rob Johnson and is working on a book called Nuev@s Voces Poeticas: A Dialogue about New Chican@ Poetics with Isaac Chavarria, Gabriel Sanchez, & Rossy Lima Padilla to be published by University of New Mexico Press in 2015. Currently he is the organizer of the Annual Beat Poetry and Arts Festival and the Artistic Director of the Coalition of New Chican@ Artists.

SHORT FICTION

Christopher Carmona

The Road to Llorona Park: Stories

Stephen F. Austin State University Press

Paperback, 978-1-62288-117-8, 120 pgs., $16.00

July 2016

“The universe is made of stories, not of atoms.” —Muriel Rukeyser

This is a collection of stories about stories. The characters are storytellers: journalists, poets, filmmakers, novelists, playwrights, speechwriters. Set on the Texas-Mexico border, primarily in the same county in the Rio Grande Valley, this series of linked stories features a common cast, following them over several years as the border changes, illuminating how these changes affect their lives.

The Road to Llorona Park: Stories is the new collection from chameleon and poet Christopher Carmona, a Pushcart Prize nominee and assistant professor at the Rio Grande Valley campus of the University of Texas. Carmona employs varying points of view—first and third, male and female, older and younger and in-between—to explore common themes of sexual betrayal in many forms, exploitation of both people and the land, and personal and political transformation, frequently spiked with the supernatural.

Standouts include the title story about Hal and Rowena, a “post-op tranny” who used to be named Rolly, who have been best friends since childhood. This road-trip tale is told empathetically and well—touching, funny, sad, confusing, and surprisingly sweet. “Strange Leaves” is the story of an underage, undocumented Guatemalan girl (who, as a young woman, will denounce the “pay-tree-archy” in her newfound English). Carmona creates a technique of broken English and a blend of straight text and iTelegrams to compelling effect. The title is a riff on “Strange Fruit.” There is blood at the root here, too.

The poet in Carmona serves up some striking images and creative turns of phrase. A woman awakes and “the remnants of her makeup were just abstract art” in the early morning. An aspiring novelist resents the cursor blinking on his computer screen, likening it to “that Dutch kid holding his finger in the hole, stopping anything from coming out.”

Less frequently, Carmona is funny, as when Rowena admonishes Hal, a writer, for handing out his home address. “There are a lot of Misery creeps out there,” she says. Unfortunately, Carmona is ill-served by negligent copyediting and proofreading, which is so poor as to be distracting. On the plus side, the artwork decorating the first page of each story is a nice addition to the text.

The Road to Llorona Park is an uneven collection, but Carmona has vast potential. The stories improve as you continue reading—Carmona developing along with his characters.

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