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Francisco Jimenez - The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child

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The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child: summary, description and annotation

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After dark in a Mexican border town, a father holds open a hole in a wire fence as his wife and two small boys crawl through.So begins life in the United States for many people every day. And so begins this collection of twelve autobiographical stories by Santa Clara University professor Francisco Jim??????nez, who at the age of four illegally crossed the border with his family in 1947. The Circuit, the story of young Panchito and his trumpet, is one of the most widely anthologized stories in Chicano literature. At long last, Jim??????nez offers more about the wise, sensitive little boy who has grown into a role model for subsequent generations of immigrants.These independent but intertwined stories follow the family through their circuit, from picking cotton and strawberries to topping carrots--and back agai--over a number of years. As it moves from one labor camp to the next, the little family of four grows into ten. Impermanence and poverty define their lives. But with faith, hope, and back-breaking work, the family endures. A jewel of a book--Rolando Hinojosa-Smith These stories are so realistic they choke the heart.--Rudolfo Anaya

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Page iii The Circuit Stories From the Life of a Migrant Child - photo 1
Page iii
The Circuit
Stories From the Life of a Migrant Child
Francisco Jimnez
University of
New Mexico Press
Albuquerque

title:The Circuit : Stories From the Life of a Migrant Child
author:Jimnez, Francisco.
publisher:University of New Mexico
isbn10 | asin:0826317979
print isbn13:9780826317971
ebook isbn13:9780585187846
language:English
subjectCalifornia--Social life and customs--Fiction, Migrant agricultural laborers--Fiction, Mexican American families--Fiction, Mexican Americans--Fiction.
publication date:1997
lcc:PS3560.I55C57 1997eb
ddc:813/.54
subject:California--Social life and customs--Fiction, Migrant agricultural laborers--Fiction, Mexican American families--Fiction, Mexican Americans--Fiction.
Page iv
1997 Francisco Jimnez
All rights reserved. First edition.
Fifth printing, 1999
The following stories have been previously published:
"The Circuit" in The Arizona Quarterly;
"Moving Still" in California History,
"Learning the Game" in River Sedge.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jimnez, Francisco, 1943
The circuit: stories from the life of a migrant child
Francisco Jimnez1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-8263-1797-9(pbk.)
1. Mexican AmericansCaliforniaSocial life and customsFiction.
2. Migrant agricultural laborersCalifornia-Fiction.
3. Mexican American familiesCaliforniaFiction.
I. Title.
PS3560,155C57 1997
813'.54dc21 97-4844
CIP
Designed by Sue Niewiarowski
Page v
To my parents and
my seven sisters and brothers
:
Avelina
/Rorra
Evangelina
/Yerman
Maria Luisa
/Licha
Roberto
/Toto
Jos Francisco
/Trampita
Juan Manuel
/Torito
and Rubn
/Carne Seca
Page vii
Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Under the Wire
1
Soledad
9
Inside Out
14
Miracle in Tent City,
27
El Angel de Oro
45
Christmas Gift
51
Death Forgiven
57
Cotton Sack
61
The Circuit
73
Learning the Game
84
To Have and to Hold
96
Moving Still
113

Page ix
Acknowledgments
There are many people who made this collection of short stories possible. I am indebted to my family whose lives are represented in this book. These stories are their stories as well as mine. These are also the stories of many migrant children of yesterday and today. I thank them all and ask their forgiveness for taking the liberty to write about them, knowing full well my limitations as a writer. Their courage, tenacity, and unwavering hope in the midst of adversity have been a constant inspiration to me.
Thanks to the many teachers and students who have written to me over the years about my work. Their particular interest in my story, "The Circuit," and their encouragement to write more stories about my life have motivated me to continue writing.
I am grateful to my friends and colleagues who guided me along the way with constructive criticism: Cedric Busette, mi amigo del alma; Kate R. Ferguson; and Alma Garcia. A special thanks to my immediate family for patiently listening to various
Page x
drafts of the stories and offering valuable comments on them.
I would like to express my sincere gratitude to my teachers whose faith in my ability and guidance helped me break the migrant circuit.
I am thankful to Santa Clara University for giving me the time and encouragement to complete this book.
Finally, I am also indebted to my editor, Andrea Otaez, for her valuable suggestions for improvements and for her support.
Page 1
Under the Wire
"La frontera" is a word I often heard when I was a child living in El Rancho Blanco, a small village nestled on barren, dry hills several miles north of Guadalajara, Mexico. I heard it for the first time back in the late 1940s when Pap and Mam told me and Roberto, my older brother, that someday we would take a long trip north, cross la frontera, enter California, and leave our poverty behind.
I did not know exactly what California was either, but Pap's eyes sparkled whenever he talked about it with Mam and his friends. "Once we cross la frontera, we'll make a good living in California," he would say, standing up straight and sticking out his chest.
Roberto, who is four years older than I, became excited every time Pap talked about the trip to California. He didn't like living in El Rancho Blanco, especially after visiting our older cousin, Fito, in Guadalajara.
Fito had left El Rancho Blanco. He was working in a tequila factory and living in a two-bedroom
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