In this Book

What Drowns the Flowers in Your Mouth: A Memoir of Brotherhood

Book
2018
Program: Big Ten Open Books
Collection: Gender and Sexuality Studies
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Big 10 Alliance
summary
Burdened by poverty, illiteracy, and vulnerability as Mexican immigrants to California’s Coachella Valley, three generations of González men turn to vices or withdraw into depression. As brothers Rigoberto and Alex grow to manhood, they are haunted by the traumas of their mother’s early death, their lonely youth, their father’s desertion, and their grandfather’s invective. Rigoberto’s success in escaping—first to college and then by becoming a writer—is blighted by his struggles with alcohol and abusive relationships, while Alex contends with difficult family relations, his own rocky marriage, and fatherhood. Descending into a dark emotional space that compromises their mental and physical health, the brothers eventually find hope in aiding each other. This is an honest and revealing window into the complexities of Latino masculinity, the private lives of men, and the ways they build strength under the weight of grief, loss, and despair.

Table of Contents

Cover

Copyright, Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Half Title Page

pp. 1-2

Opening Salvo

pp. 3-5

Days of Hunger, Days of Want

pp. 6-18

The Prisoner of Nahuatzen

pp. 19-24

Adelina's Story

pp. 25-38

Canto

pp. 39-52

Take a Guess

pp. 53-62

About Women

pp. 63-76

A Complicated Man

pp. 77-104

Post Mortem

pp. 105-110

When the Hard Times Become Lonely Times

pp. 111-125

Greetings from New York City, 1968

pp. 126-138

Brotherly Love

pp. 139-150

A Oaxaca Journal

pp. 151-166

Family Outing

pp. 167-173

The Wondrous Flight of the Hummingbird

pp. 174-179

Manpower

pp. 180-190

Acknowledgments

pp. 191-192

Living out

pp. 193-196
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