Here's to you, Jesusa! / Elena Poniatowska ; translated from the spanish by Deanna Heikkinen

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux , c2001.Description: xxx, 303 p. ; 22 cmISBN:
  • 9780142001226
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • LAS FIC PON
Summary: Here's to You, Jesusa! is a rich, sensitive retelling of the life of Jesusa Palancares de Aguilar. Born in Oaxaca in the early 1900s, she loses her mother at a young age and lives with her father until one of his girlfriends beats and stabs her. Moved to her godmother's house, Jesusa serves as a maid until she reunites with her father during the Mexican Revolution and joins the army of General Jesus Carranza. In the army, Jesusa is forced to marry another soldier who beats and abandons her. On one such occasion she is beaten so severely that it draws the attention of the general himself, who punishes her husband. After the revolution, Jesusa finds work in Mexico City, first as a domestic, then in a series of factories, and begins her long history of run-ins with the police. Poniatowska documents a colorful life while also providing a compelling, firsthand account of the most important events in Mexico during the twentieth century.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Latin American Studies Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. LAS FIC PON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 048889
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LAS FIC PON Lilus Kikus and other stories LAS FIC PON Tinisima LAS FIC PON The heart of the artichoke LAS FIC PON Here's to you, Jesusa! LAS FIC PON Dear Diego LAS FIC PON The skin of the sky LAS FIC PUI Heartbreak tango

Translation of Hasta no verte, Jesús mío.

Here's to You, Jesusa! is a rich, sensitive retelling of the life of Jesusa Palancares de Aguilar. Born in Oaxaca in the early 1900s, she loses her mother at a young age and lives with her father until one of his girlfriends beats and stabs her. Moved to her godmother's house, Jesusa serves as a maid until she reunites with her father during the Mexican Revolution and joins the army of General Jesus Carranza. In the army, Jesusa is forced to marry another soldier who beats and abandons her. On one such occasion she is beaten so severely that it draws the attention of the general himself, who punishes her husband. After the revolution, Jesusa finds work in Mexico City, first as a domestic, then in a series of factories, and begins her long history of run-ins with the police. Poniatowska documents a colorful life while also providing a compelling, firsthand account of the most important events in Mexico during the twentieth century.

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