Without sentiment or melodrama, this wonderful book perfectly portrays an immigrant child\'s view of leaving Mexico for California in the 1940s to pursue a better life.
Reside con su familia en Santa Clara, California.
Ha recibido premios por sus obras Cajas de cart n, Senderos fronterizos, La mariposa y M s all de m .
Obtuvo una maestr a y un doctorado en la Universidad de Columbia, siendo actualmente jefe del Departamento de Lenguajes Modernos y Literatura de la Universidad de Santa Clara, el escenario principal de Mas all de m .
Francisco Jim nez emigr de Tlaquepaque, M xico, a California, donde por muchos a os trabaj junto con su familia en los campos.
Un viaje que abrir el coraz n y la mente de los lectores.
Narrada por un joven que anhela estudiar y obtener el derecho de elegir un hogar, esta es una historia de supervivencia, fe y esperanza.
El intenso relato del viaje de una familia a trav s de los campos de California viviendo una vida en constante movimiento, de campos de fresa a campos de algod n, y de campamentos a cobertizos de un ambiente.
He lives in Santa Clara, California, with his family.
He is the award-winning author of The Circuit, Breaking Through, La Mariposa, and Reaching Out . from Columbia University and is now chairman of the Modern Languages and Literature Department at Santa Clara University, the setting of much of Reaching Out.
He received both his master\'s degree and his Ph.
D.
Francisco Jim nez emigrated from Tlaquepaque, Mexico, to California, where he worked for many years in the fields with his family.
It is a journey that will open readers\' hearts and minds.
Seen through the eyes of a boy who longs for an education and the right to call one palce home, this is a story of survival, faith, and hope.
A powerful account of a family\'s journey to the fields of California -- to a life of constant moving, from strawberry fields to cotton fields, from tent cities to one-room shacks.
Without sentiment or melodrama, this wonderful book perfectly portrays an immigrant child\'s view of leaving Mexico for California in the 1940s to pursue a better life