The Flowers

by Dagoberto Gilb

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Book cover for The Flowers

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Winner of the PEN/Hemingway Award for The Magic of Blood and most recently a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for his nonfiction collection, Gritos, Dagoberto Gilb is much admired for his mix of compact style and socially brazen storytelling. He makes simple, ordinary language and imagery feel exotic and profound. With a voice and style reminiscent of Junot Diaz and Sherman Alexie, in The Flowers Gilb has taken on the voice of a Chicano teenager looking at manhood. Sonny Bravo is a tender, unusually smart fifteen-year-old who is living with his vivacious mother in a large city where intense prejudice is not just white against black, but also brown. When Sonny's mother, Silvia, suddenly marries an Okie building contractor named Cloyd Longpre, they are uprooted to a small apartment building, Los Flores. As Sonny sweeps its sidewalks, he meets his neighbors and becomes ensnared in their lives: Cindy, an eighteen-year-old druggie who is married and bored; Nica, a cloistered Mexican girl who cares for her infant brother but who is never allowed to leave their unit. The other tenants range from Pink, an albino black man who sells old cars in front of the building, to Bud, a muscled-up construction worker who hates blacks and Mexicans, even while he's married to a Mexican-American woman. The Flowers is about breaking rules. Dagoberto Gilb, in arguably his most powerful work yet, has written an inspiring novel about hate, pain, anger, and love that transcends age, nice, and time. Gilb's novel displays the fearlessness and wit that have helped make him one of this country's most authentic and original voices.
  • ISBN10 0802118593
  • ISBN13 9780802118592
  • Publish Date 21 January 2008
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 20 September 2012
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 256
  • Language English