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LIVING AS AN UNDOCUMENTED PERSON IN AMERICA, A BOOK REVIEW

Marcelo Hernández Castillo. Children of the Land: A Memoir (New York: Harper Collins, 2020), pp. 362.

Every American should read this memoir because it offers a real, personalized story about what it means to live as an undocumented person in the United States. Most Americans have no idea.

The author was brought to the United States in 1991 as a youngster by his undocumented parents, making him a DACA person. This means that, like his parents, he too was undocumented but received protection from deportation in 2012 from President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (hence DACA). He was one of a great multitude in similar circumstances, but different from most of them because he obtained a green card visa later, after all, as he explains.

Like most DACA folk, Castillo became Americanized to the point of losing fluency in Spanish, relying on over the counter drugs, wearing a nose plug, and even getting tattooed. And, like many of his fellow Dacas, he also achieved what most mainstream Americans do not: a master’s degree from a leading university. He does not expound on the challenges he encountered doing this, but they must have been enormous. Instead of becoming a lawyer or a doctor, he became a poet. Here are the reasons he admits for this:

I wanted to write poetry because I believed any practice in the English language would distance myself from my identity as an immigrant and I thought (naively ashamedly so) that the farthest association from an immigrant was a poet How foolish I was. Little did I know the lineage of immigrant poets I came from…(p. 75).

Then, again he explains regarding learning English:

I wanted to write and speak English better than any white person, any citizen, because in the unthinkable case of ever getting caught by immigration, I thought I would impress them enough with my mastery of English to let me go. What a stupid idea. (pp.75-76)

Castillo’s memoir is framed around the agonizing challenges of obtaining his own residential visa, then trying to get his father’s and later his mother’s. I found this part particularly gratifying because he unabashedly divulges the psychological and social strains involved. Just driving to be interviewed at the ICE offices to qualify for the visa he became fearful of committing a mistake that would get him pulled over and arrested obliterating his dream of holding a visa. Paranoia and trauma are words that he uses to describe his feelings—and those of his family. The rest of us would be better Americans if we could appreciate these experiences.

He is a poet writing his memoirs, so the biographical elements mentioned in the paragraphs above are veiled in his often florid text and fluid structure. Reading the text with care will help.

Why Castillo’s family chose to immigrate without documents in the first place is a crucial point addressed only tangentially because it is, after all, a memoir, not a history book. He works as a professional poet.

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We Became Mexican American, a book

WAS TRUMP “COMPROMISED” BY RUSSIA? A BOOK REVIEW

Strzok, Peter. Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of Donald J. Trump (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2020). 350 pp.

The author of this book is one of the many government officials who was removed from his job with the endorsement of President Trump during his administration. In effect, Trump fired Strzok, an FBI agent, for criticizing him privately and then attacked him viciously in the media bringing Strzok’s career to a disgraceful ending. The information in this book springs from this controversial dismissal, and there is more.

The author, a counterintelligence specialist, was directed to lead the FBI investigation into the Trump campaign organization’s connections with Russian agents many weeks before Donald Trump was elected. The essence of Strzok’s argument is that too many ties began popping up between Trump’s campaign managers and the Russians, especially when a Russian lawyer offered “dirt” on Hillary Clinton, who was running against Trump, to Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, Trump’s son in law, and Paul Manafort, a Trump associate. Why? To influence the election so that Americans would vote for Trump, not Clinton. This constituted foreign intervention in America’s domestic politics.

This was the situation that compelled top level FBI officials, including Strzok, to begin investigating Trump’s campaign organization. At one point they asked themselves, could Donald Trump be involved as well? Was he compromised? When Trump learned of this investigation he began his attack on Strzok.

The first half of the book offers an intriguing chronicle of the author’s training as a counterintelligence agent including cases in which he was involved, and which exemplify his kind of work. If you like spy narratives, you will enjoy these pages. The second half offers the evolution of the circumstances that finally triggered the investigation of Trump’s campaign managers, a situation that became the author’s crowning counterintelligence assignment, ironically. It is a vital case study in President Trump’s foreign relations, especially vis-à-vis Russia, and the way he manipulated officials in his administration, even members of the CIA and the FBI.  

Categories
We Became Mexican American, a book

A book review about Friedrich Nietzsche

Cate, Curtis. Friedrich Nietzsche (Woodstock: Overlook Press, 2005), p. 689.

Many history students usually cross paths with Nietzsche’s name, at one point or another. In a university setting, for example certain ideas may be described as “Nietzschean,” even though his intellectual creativity ranged widely from musical composition to poetry to philosophy and culture. Truly, he possessed an amazing intellect. After his death, German Nazis are said to have appropriated his sharply worded assertions of man’s ability to forge his own destiny, assertions that were revolutionary in many ways. He wrote at a time when democracy, capitalism and socialism were virtually unknown. In fact, he was an early critic of Christianity and other forms of organized religion, encouraging his detractors to label him as nihilistic and anti-authoritarian.  

Cate’s work gave me a glimpse of his humanity and how Nietzsche gradually formed the philosophy that bears his name. He enlightens the reader about the limited means that Friedrich’s mother and sister could command and why they became beholden to relatives in raising him. It could be said that in the absence of a father Friedrich grew up hen-pecked by them and this may have had something to do with the fact that he was unable to form a normal relationship with women. He suffered from headaches so severe that they literally incapacitated him for days. Still, he excelled in school, benefitting from Germany’s best teachers in a way that brought him to the attention of luminaries like Richard Wagner, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. He died in a storm of headaches.

I came across Nietzsche’s name at the university too, both as a graduate student and later as a professor. I wanted to have a better grasp of him. It was a good read, though tedious at times, depending on the amount of detail I wanted to soak up. Cate is credited with writing the biographies of other distinguished European writers and so this volume obviously enjoys proper company on library shelves.