"Beautifully written and important...
Martinez shows us how \'America\' is being reimagined by its uninvited, its disrespected, its invisible, and he shows us that they will change us, whether we like it or not."-- Los Angeles Times In the decade since Crossing Over first appeared, immigration from Mexico has only become more fraught and more lethal, the rallying cry of nativist politics and a pawn in the war on terror.
He lives in Los Angeles..
Author of The Other Side , he has appeared as a commentator on Nightline, Frontline, and CNN.
About the Author: Rub n Mart nez , an Emmy Award-winning journalist and poet, is associate editor at Pacific News Service and a correspondent for PBS\'s religion and ethics news weekly.
Hailed as "valuable," "passionate," and "terrific," Crossing Over puts a human face on the phenomenon of Mexican immigration and the vibrant Latino culture it introduces to the U.
S., and remains a beautifully written classic of our time.
Far from joining the melting pot, Mart nez argues, the seven million migrants who are now here are creating a new Hispanic-influenced culture that is dramatically altering both Mexico and the United States.
Following the emigration of the Ch vez clan, an extended Mexican Family who lost three sons in a tragic border accident, Rub n Mart nez traces the migrants\' progress from their small southern Mexican town of Cher n to California, Wisconsin, and Missouri.
Thousands die Crossing the line, and those who reach "the other side" are branded illegals, undocumented and unprotected.
Yet the U.
S.-Mexican border remains one of the most permeable boundaries in the world, breached daily by Mexicans in search of work. "Beautifully written and important...
Martinez shows us how \'America\' is being reimagined by its uninvited, its disrespected, its invisible, and he shows us that they will change us, whether we like it or not."-- Los Angeles Times In the decade since Crossing Over first appeared, immigration from Mexico has only become more fraught and more lethal, the rallying cry of nativist politics and a pawn in the war on terror