INTERVIEW

Interview: Luis Rodriguez and Tia Chucha — Casting A Giant Shadow

Written by Lisa Alvarado
Published June 06, 2007

Luis J. Rodriguez has emerged as one of the leading Chicano writers in the country with ten nationally published books in memoir, fiction, nonfiction, children’s literature, and poetry. Luis’ poetry has won a Poetry Center Book Award, a PEN Josephine Miles Literary Award, and “Foreword” magazine’s Silver Book Award, among others. His two books for children have won a Patterson Young Adult Book Award, two “Skipping Stones” Honor Awards, and a Parent’s Choice Book Award, among others. A novel, Music of the Mill, was published in Spring 2005 by Rayo/HarperCollins; a poetry collection, My Nature is Hunger: New & Selected Poems, 1989-2004, came out in Fall 2005 from Curbstone Press/Rattle Edition.

Luis J. RodriguezLuis is best known for his 1993 memoir of gang life, Always Running: La Vida Loca, Gang Days in L.A. An international best seller, with more than 20 printings, and around 250,000 copies sold, the memoir also garnered a Carl Sandburg Literary Award, a Chicago Sun-Times Book Award, and was designated a New York Times Notable Book. Written as a cautionary tale for Luis’ then 15-year-old son Ramiro — who had joined a Chicago gang — the memoir is popular among youth and teachers. Despite this, the American Library Association in 1999 called Always Running one of the 100 most censored books in the United States. Efforts to remove his books from public school libraries and reading lists have occurred in Illinois, Michigan, Texas, and more recently in California, where the battles were quite heated.

Yet for all the controversy, Luis has gained the respect of the literary community. In addition to the above honors, he has received a Sundance Institute Art Writers Fellowship, a Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Writers’ Award, a Lannan Fellowship for Poetry, an Hispanic Heritage Award for Literature, a National Association for Poetry Therapy Public Service Award, a California Arts Council Fellowship, an Illinois Author of the Year Award, several Illinois Arts Council fellowships, the 2001 Premio Fronterizo, and “Unsung Heroes of Compassion” Award, presented by His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Luis is also known for helping start a number of prominent organizations, such as Chicago’s Guild Complex, one of the largest literary arts organizations in the Midwest, and the publishing house of Tia Chucha Press. He is also one of the founders of Youth Struggling for Survival, a Chicago-based not-for-profit community group working with gang and nongang youth. He helped start Rock A Mole (rhymes with guacamole) Productions, which produces music/arts festivals, CDs, and film in Los Angeles. And he is a cofounder of Tia Chucha’s Café & Centro Cultural: a bookstore, coffee shop, performance space, art gallery, and workshop center that opened in December 2001 in the Northeast San Fernando Valley.

On top of this, Luis has spent some twenty five years conducting workshops, readings, and talks in prisons, juvenile facilities, homeless shelters, migrant camps, universities, public and private schools, conferences, Native American reservations, and men’s retreats throughout the United States. He has also traveled to Canada, Europe, Mexico, Central America, and Puerto Rico doing similar work among disaffected populations. In addition, he’s editor of the new Chicano online magazine, Xispas.com.

Luis has been part of the Mosaic Multicultural Foundation’s Men’s Conferences since 1994 with Mosaic founder Michael Meade, healer Orland Bishop, West African teacher-elder Malidoma Somé and American Buddhist Jack Kornfield. At these conferences, the complex but vital issues of race, class, gender, and personal rage are addressed with dialogue, ritual, story, poetry, and art involving men of all walks of life, including those in urban street gangs. He also created a CD of original music and his poems called My Name’s Not Rodriguez for Dos Manos Records, released in Summer 2002.

Luis’ work has also been widely anthologized, including in Letters of a Nation: A Collection of Extraordinary American Letters (1997 Broadway Books/Kodansha American), and most recently in the Outlaw Bible of American Poetry (1999 Thunder’s Mouth Press) and Bum Rush the Page: A Def Poetry Jam (2001 Three Rivers Press). His poems and articles have appeared in college and high school textbooks throughout the United States and Europe. He has done radio productions and writing for LA’s KPFK-FM, California Public Radio as well as Chicago’s WMAQ-AM’s All-News radio and WBEZ-FM. And his writings have appeared over the last twenty-five years in The Nation, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, U.S. News & World Report, LA Weekly, The Philadelphia Inquirer Magazine, American Poetry Review, San Jose Mercury News, Grand Street, Utne Reader, Prison Life, Progressive Magazine, and Rock & Rap Confidential, among others. In 2005, he was asked to become a contributing writer to the LA Times' West magazine.

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
Lisa Alvarado is a poet, novelist, and performance artist. She is the author of The Housekeeper's Diary, Reclamo, and Sister Chicas. In 2007, Sister Chicas was the 2nd place winner of the Mariposa/International Latino Book Award for Best 1st Novel in English. She also shares her views and literary criticism on La Bloga.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Interview: Luis Rodriguez and Tia Chucha — Casting A Giant Shadow
Published: June 06, 2007
Type: Interview
Section: Culture
Filed Under: Culture: Personal History, Culture: Original Fiction, Culture: Family and Relationships, Culture: Arts, Books: The Writing Life, Books: Spirituality, Books: Poetry, Books: Original Fiction, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Latino
Writer: Lisa Alvarado
Lisa Alvarado's BC Writer page
Lisa Alvarado's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Lisa Alvarado
Culture: Personal History
Culture: Original Fiction
Culture: Family and Relationships
Culture: Arts
Books: The Writing Life
Books: Spirituality
Books: Poetry
Books: Original Fiction
Books: Nonfiction
Books: Literature and Fiction
Books: Latino
All Culture Articles
All Interview articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — June 7, 2007 @ 23:34PM — John Barone [URL]

We need to legalize drugs to stop the turf wars of Gangs we need the National Guard in Cities to restore order in our streets we also need to legalize prostitution to prevent the spread of AIDS

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/64703)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments