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An Uninterrupted View of the Sky

Page 17

by Melanie Crowder


  How much does a dream weigh? And how much, hope?

  I tear open the rectangle with the academic seal and skim down through salutations and introductions.

  We are pleased to accept your application to Universidad Mayor de San Simón. This fall, you will be assigned an academic advisor in the law department.

  In the dim shack, stars swim in front of my eyes and a sigh as long as the winds carving down the peaks and running the length of the Altiplano leaves my lungs. It’s just a beginning, what I’m holding in my hands. But we need this beginning so very badly.

  I open the other rectangle with Papá’s careful lettering on the front. I unfold the paper. My hands begin to shake.

  Francisco,

  Thank you for your letters. You cannot guess how good it feels to know you and your sister are safe and to know your grandparents are happy to have received you.

  I don’t know what I have ever done to deserve such faithful children. Thank you for taking care of your sister all this time. Thank you for taking care of me all this time.

  The page splatters as my heart drains. I turn it over. On the back, through blurry eyes, I see sectioned verses and clumping stanzas flowing like water down the page.

  It’s a poem.

  My father, the poet, has found his words again.

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  More than fifteen years ago, I spent a summer during college volunteering in Cochabamba, Bolivia. I worked at a nonprofit facility that provided health care, meals, enrichment opportunities, and a safe place to spend the afternoons for children who lived in the nearby prisons alongside their incarcerated parents.

  During my time there, I never met a Francisco, Pilar, or Soledad. These characters are my inventions. I heard stories like theirs, however, and I witnessed their truths in the lives of the young people I worked with. Unfortunately, the tragic effects of the 1008 and the United States’ role in both its passage and brutal enforcement are not fictitious.

  Bolivia is a constitutional democracy. A law that violated citizens’ rights, as the 1008 did, should never have been allowed to stand. Over the years, reforms have amended the law, but not before Bolivia’s prisons were overfull and its justice system too bogged down to adequately remedy the damage done to countless families and communities.

  In Bolivia, colonialism left behind an intensely stratified society that for centuries oppressed and exploited its indigenous peoples. To complicate matters, Bolivia has long been considered economically to be the poorest country in the region, the effects of which made it vulnerable to foreign intervention.

  Today, the country holds the largest proportion of indigenous people on the continent. In recent years, the people of Bolivia have brought about wide-reaching reform to indigenous rights and representation, access to and equity in education, and more. As with any country seeking to create a more just society, however, change takes time, and as of the writing of this book, Bolivia’s prison kids are still waiting for justice to find them.

  • • •

  When I left Bolivia and returned to college and my privileged North American life, the human cost of my country’s war on drugs weighed heavily on me. The brief time during which I joined those pitting themselves against that particular tangle of crippling poverty, aggressive foreign policy, and persistent injustice has stuck with me.

  I’m a writer. When confronted with what seems like an immovable obstacle, the only way I know forward is through story.

  Thank you for reading and for sharing this one with me.

  GLOSSARY

  abuela/abuelo/abuelos: a grandmother/grandfather/grandparents

  aguayo: a patterned, woven cloth from the Andes region, commonly made from llama wool

  ají amarillo: a mild chili used to flavor many traditional Bolivian dishes

  Altiplano: the high plains in the Andes region of Bolivia and neighboring countries

  anciana: an elderly woman

  ayllu: an indigenous community of the Andes region

  Aymara: one of the groups of indigenous people of the Andes and their language

  arroyo: a gully in an arid region that is usually dry except after heavy rains

  Ballivián, José: a wartime general and the eleventh president of Bolivia

  biblioteca: a library

  boliviano: the currency of Bolivia

  bruto: stupid, coarse

  campesino: a peasant; the term preferred by many to replace the slur “indio” when referring to the indigenous peoples of the Andes region

  cancha: a large market in Cochabamba

  cárcel: a prison

  charango: a small guitar-like ten-stringed instrument

  cholita: a Bolivian woman who dresses in traditional indigenous clothing (Her attire indicates not only whether she is Quechua, Aymara, or a member of one of the other indigenous nations, but also which region of the country she is from.)

  chu’lo: a knitted wool hat with earflaps

  chuño: a dehydrated potato with a very long shelf life, a staple of the Andean diet

  cobarde: a coward

  coca: a bush commonly grown throughout the Andes with leaves that can be processed to produce cocaine but that, in their natural form, act merely as a mild stimulant comparable to coffee

  cocada: a coconut cookie

  cojudo: profanity; in Bolivia, an asshole

  Cordilleras: parallel mountain ranges in the Andes

  Día de los Muertos: the Day of the Dead

  escabeche de verduras: pickled vegetables

  fútbol: soccer

  futbolito: a version of soccer played in small spaces

  gato montés: a wild cat native to the Andes

  gringo: in Spanish-speaking countries and contexts, citizens of the United States; particularly white people

  hacienda: a landed estate

  hacendados: people who own haciendas

  indio/india: a slur used to label an indigenous man/woman

  Inka: the largest empire in pre-Columbian America

  ley: a law

  mestizo: a person of mixed European and indigenous descent

  oca: an edible South American tuber

  Oficina de Tránsito: the division of police responsible for traffic and highways

  Pachamama: Mother Earth; a goddess in Andean religious traditions

  pan con queso: a cheese-covered bun or other variation commonly served for breakfast

  picante de pollo: a traditional dish consisting of a spiced sauce and chicken, and served with rice or chuño

  profesor/profesora: a male/female teacher

  pucha: interjection; in Bolivia, an exclamation of surprise, frustration, or exasperation

  puya: a bromeliad native to South and Central America

  Quechua: one of the groups of indigenous people of the Andes and their language

  quinua: a grain native to the Andes, internationally known as quinoa

  quipu: a series of colored, knotted strings hung from a principal strand and used for counting and record-keeping in the Inka empire

  salteña: a Bolivian savory pastry filled with meat, sauce, and vegetables

  serenata: a serenade

  singani: a type of spirits produced in Bolivia

  sopa de maní: a soup made from peanuts and potatoes

  tantawawa: a sweet bread baked to celebrate the Day of the Dead

  Todos Santos: All Saints’ Day

  trancapecho: a steak sandwich

  ven: come

  vicuña: a wild animal related to the llama that lives in the high alpine areas of the Andes

  wawitay: a term of endearment

  SELECTED SOURCES

  Allen, Catherine J. The Hold Life Has: Coca and Cultural Identity in an Andean Community. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Pres
s, 2002. Print.

  Kohl, Benjamin H. and Linda Farthing, with Poma F. F. Muruchi. From the Mines to the Streets: A Bolivian Activist’s Life. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2011. Print.

  Ritter, Martha, ed. Children of Law 1008. Cochabamba, Bolivia: Andean Information Network, 1996. Print.

  Steele, Liza and Edward Telles. “Pigmentocracy in the Americas: How is Educational Attainment Related to Skin Color?” AmericasBarometer Insights: 2012, Number 73. PDF file.

  Youngers, Coletta, and Eileen Rosin, eds. Drugs and Democracy in Latin America: The Impact of U.S. Policy. Boulder, Colo.: L. Rienner, 2005. Print.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  No matter how much research an author undertakes, there are nuances only an expert can understand. I am indebted to the following people for sharing their conversation, abundant knowledge, insight, and fierce love for the country and people of Bolivia with me: Flora Teran, Dr. Juan Carlos Madeni, Pamela Lagrava de Madeni, Anthony Choque, Dr. Carol Conzelman, Marcela Olivera and Lee Cridland. Any outstanding errors or omissions are my own.

  Thank you to my brilliant editor, Liza Kaplan, who champions her projects with enthusiasm and absolute commitment. Thank you to the wonderful people at Philomel, and to the greater Penguin team that has worked so expertly to put this book into the hands of readers: Michael Green, Talia Benamy, Maria Fazio, Jenny Chung, David Briggs, Emily Rodriguez, Liz Lunn, Ana Deboo, Kathleen Keating, and Bridget Hartzler.

  Thanks, as always, to my agent, Ammi-Joan Paquette. For their keen eyes and kind critique, I am grateful to my early readers: Lisa Schroeder, Kristin Derwich, Meg Wiviott, Laura Resau and Tiffany Crowder.

  Finally, I could not do this work without the love and support of my wife. Truly, I’m the lucky one.

  Read an excerpt from Melanie Crowder’s critically acclaimed novel

  AUDACITY

  clouds

  Over the gray plain of the sea

  winds are gathering the storm-clouds

  Words

  float like wayward clouds

  in the air

  in my mind.

  Now his wing the wave

  Wait—

  or was it,

  Now the wave his wing caresses

  I dip a hand

  into my apron pocket

  unfold a square of paper

  against my palm,

  hunch my shoulder,

  hide it from view.

  Ah,

  yes.

  Now his wing the wave caresses,

  now he rises like an arrow

  cleaving clouds

  and

  The poem is ripped

  from my hand

  and the air,

  where only wayward clouds

  had been,

  is full of shouting,

  accusations

  a hand raised in anger

  ready to strike—

  the world slows

  in the second before

  pain blooms

  in my jaw;

  a second

  to hope

  the poem is

  safe

  in my mind

  where fists

  and fury

  cannot shake it free.

  ordinary

  Just because I am

  small-boned

  and short,

  brown-haired

  and brown-eyed,

  just because I look

  common

  as a wren

  meek

  as a robin

  that does not mean

  what is inside me is also

  common

  as a wren

  meek

  as a robin.

  Everything

  I wish for

  is strange

  aberrant

  even wrong in this place

  but I know

  I cannot be the only one

  blanketing her bright feathers

  hooding her sharp eyes

  hiding

  in plain sight.

  My life

  so far

  has been ordinary

  simple

  small

  but I cannot shake the feeling

  that inside this little body

  something stronger

  is nesting

  waiting

  for a chance

  to flex her talons

  snap her wings

  taut

  and glide

  far away

  from here.

  ACCOLADES FOR

  AUDACITY

  A 2015 National Jewish Book Award Finalist

  A Washington Post Best Children’s Book

  A New York Public Library Best Book for Teens

  An IRA Notable Book for a Global Society

  A 2016 NCTE Children’s Notable Verse Novel

  A New York Public Library Best Book for Teens

  An ALA Top 10 Best Fiction for Young Adults Pick

  An ALSC Notable Children’s Book Nominee

  A BCCB Blue Ribbon Winner

  “Crowder breathes life into a world long past. . . . Compelling, powerful and unforgettable.”

  —Kirkus Reviews,

  starred review

  “This book stands alone . . . an impactful addition to any historical fiction collection.”

  —School Library Journal,

  starred review

  “With a thorough historical note, glossary of terms, and bibliography, this will make an excellent complement to units on women’s rights and the labor movement, but it will also satisfy readers in search of a well-told tale of a fierce heroine.”

  —The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books,

  starred review

  “This is an excellent title that can open discussions in U.S. history and economics courses about women’s rights, labor unions, and the immigrant experience.”

  —School Library Connection,

  starred review

  “Audacity throbs with the emotions of this exceptional young woman who fought for equal rights and improved labor standards in factories.”

  —BookPage

  “Brilliant, riveting, informative.”

  —Cynthia Levinson,

  critically acclaimed author of We’ve Got a Job

  “[A]n evocative reimagining of a fascinating historical figure who should be remembered for her determination in the face of great odds and powerful opposition—and for her role in changing America.”

  —Margaret Peterson Haddix,

  critically acclaimed, bestselling author of Uprising

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