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Thursday, April 11
The Juanita Tobin Memorial Reading
Table Rock Room, 201B
Plemmons Student Union
Craft Talk: 3:30-4:45 p.m.
Reading: 6 p.m.
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REVIEW QUOTES:
“A triumph, a gutting cry of love and longing for all that migration sows and uproots in the survivors of exile. In retracing her family’s story of leaving a Chile under Pinochet to 1980s Oklahoma, Soledad Caballero gives soaring voice to the ways history, memory, and the collective weight of our disappeared live silenced, but never unheard, in our bodies and hearts. It’s hard to express how much these poems made unnamed parts of me feel seen.”
– Natalia Sylvester, author of Everyone Knows You Go Home
and Chasing the Sun
“Caballero bears unflinching witness to the emotional trauma inherited from war-ravaged Chile to the exiled plains of Oklahoma. As though to witness is to love. These poems negotiate the transitions of language, memory, country, her battle with cancer, counterbalancing the violence from which she fled, with a transformative devotion to details.”
– Richard Blanco, Presidential Inaugural Poet
“Caballero explores memory, war in Chile, and immigration to the U.S. in a deeply personal and touching way.”
– LATINO STORIES, “2021 Top 10 ‘New’ Latino Latinx Authors
You, Your Family, and Teachers Need To Read"