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...between past and present and between the diverse elements of Mexican culture. Fuentes' first novel "Where the Air is Clear" (1958) is a mythical history of Mexico City. In this novel Mexico's mythical past of rituals and sacrifices appears parallel with the present. In "The Death of Artemio Cruz" (1962), the story is narrated by the revolutionary turned opportunist of the book's title as he lies on his death bed. The story is told by multiple voices with a constantly shifting narrative and chronological viewpoint...

Author: By Inigo L. Garcia, | Title: Fuentes: Transcending Barriers | 12/9/1985 | See Source »

...does the reader fit into this complex structure of interwoven times and multiple voices? "Terra Nostra," for example, has often been considered unreadable by critics. Yet Fuentes emphasizes that in spite of its difficulty, it is a novel which does not go unread. "The Death of Artemio Cruz" and "Where the Air is Clear" were both considered extremely difficult and complicated when they first appeared. Fuentes tells of one critic who suggested that "The Death of Artemio Cruz" served no better purpose than to be flushed down the drain. "Today," Fuentes says, "these novels are read by 15 year-olds...

Author: By Inigo L. Garcia, | Title: Fuentes: Transcending Barriers | 12/9/1985 | See Source »

Bertoldo Garcia Cruz, a car mechanic, had just taken his son to Public School No. 3 on Avenida Chapultepec. "We were in the school's main office when everything around us, four floors, went down. I helped take out four bodies, mutilated, all 14-year-olds. I took one out who was injured, but maybe he'll live...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Noise Like Thunder | 9/30/1985 | See Source »

...scientists, the great quake and its aftershocks were not surprising. Karen McNally, a geophysicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, had warned in 1981 that substantial seismic activity was likely in the area. "Everything we had seen," she says, "could not allow us to exclude the possibility of a major earthquake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Anatomy of an Earthquake | 9/30/1985 | See Source »

This is especially true, Cruz asserts, when you are dealing with Harvard. "The administration is very powerful. You can't move them with emotional ploys...What people need to do is have an irrefutable argument for divestment, and until that comes about, the University won't change its policy [which all but precludes divesting...

Author: By Laura E. Gomez, | Title: A Less Showy Kind of Activism | 9/18/1985 | See Source »

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