The Faith Healer of Olive Avenue
By Manuel Muñoz
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
239 pp
$12.95. paperback
REVIEWED BY DANIEL A. OLIVAS
With the publication of his second collection, The Faith Healer of Olive Avenue, Manuel Muñoz establishes himself as one of the best short story writers plying his craft today.
These ten connected stories grow out of the seemingly unrelenting heat of the Central Valley in California where people struggle to find meaning “among the houses either crumbling down at the foundation or boasting a fresh coat of paint.”
In “The Comeuppance of Lupe Rivera,” a young gay man named Sergio tells us about his glamorous neighbor, Lupe, who has an unending string of handsome suitors cruising by her home or taking her out on dates. While Sergio admires Lupe, other neighbors are not as impressed by this independent woman:
“There was a lot to be jealous of, if you wanted to be. When you’re smart like Lupe, you can have a job like a union arbiter for the city employees, with your own office and a car to drive around in, even if it is a government one, a beige Dodge Aries.”
Eventually, violence invades Lupe’s romantic world. Sergio, rather than blaming her, tries to make sense out of life’s disasters: “…we all make mistakes, … bad luck can ruin everything, even for someone beautiful like Lupe.” But in the end, this story is not really about Lupe but concerns Sergio and his own struggles with identity and social acceptance. Muñoz subtly weaves Sergio’s own personal story with that of Lupe demonstrating the manner by which a self-aware young man develops as a person.
In the chilling and heartbreaking story, “When You Come Into Your Kingdom,” Muñoz introduces us to Santiago, the groundskeeper for a school. Through flashbacks, we slowly learn of Santiago’s family life and his excruciating efforts to accept his overweight son, Alejandro. At one point, Santiago buys Alejandro a baseball glove so they can play catch the way fathers and sons should:
“Alejandro smiled as he tried it on, his row of white teeth, straight as soldiers, tiny and overwhelmed by the flesh of his cheeks.”
The great tragedy that Muñoz eventually reveals serves as a disturbing cautionary tale for parents who allow their expectations for their children to devolve into something vicious and selfish rather than nurturing and accepting.
Muñoz writes with great authority when it comes to the complexities and ambiguities of loss. Connie in “Lindo y Querido” is a single mother whose son, Isidro, had been in a horrific motorcycle accident. Carlos, the other boy who rode with her son, died at the scene. Connie tries to get on with life as Isidro lies in bed, incapacitated, dying. She suffers overwhelming guilt when the mother of the dead boy, with two remaining sons in tow, knocks on Connie’s door for a short visit:
“After they went away, Connie realized that she had given the impression that her son was home to get better, and she wanted to go after them, to tell the mother that they would soon have equal losses, to say something like our sons or both of them or our boys, but it was too late and she did not know where they lived.”
Connie’s eventual understanding of her son’s relationship with Carlos serves as a springboard for Muñoz’s considerable talents as a writer.
These stories are provocative, soulful and revelatory. In them, Muñoz offers powerful but restrained portrayals of life’s tragedies with the kind of maturity one does not expect from a writer in his mid-thirties. Luckily for us, Muñoz should be creating fiction for decades to come.
Daniel A. Olivas is the author of four books including Devil Talk: Stories (Bilingual Press), and is the editor of the forthcoming Latinos in Lotusland: An Anthology of Contemporary Southern California Literature (Bilingual Press, November 2007). He shares blogging duties on La Bloga, which is dedicated to all aspects of Chicano literature. His Web site is http://www.danielolivas.com. This review first appeared in the El Paso Times.
dear mr munoz,
i am doing a project on literary criticsm in school, and we are reading the last story in your book, the one with Emilio and his father and I was just wondering what rhetorical device did you use in this specific story to capture the audience's focus?
Posted by: Angela | September 28, 2008 at 07:08 PM
dear mr munoz,
i am doing a project on literary criticsm in school, and we are reading the last story in your book, the one with Emilio and his father and I was just wondering what rhetorical device did you use in this specific story to capture the audience's focus?
Posted by: Angela | September 28, 2008 at 07:08 PM