``The world is full of sorrow,`` Agapita whispered to Alfonso.
Permeated by Anaya\'s trademark religious and mythological imagery, The Sorrows of Young Alfonso is a luminous meditation on memory, reality, and the human experience..
As story builds upon story, the commonality of traits among the narrator, his subject, and perhaps Anaya himself appears more than coincidental.
The trajectory of Alfonso\'s life in turn mirrors the history of New Mexico and the turbulent beginnings of the Chicano movement in which the Young protagonist plays a trailblazing role.
In describing these events, the ``old man`` writing the letters interweaves Alfonso\'s experiences with fragments of his own life and of the New Mexican llano that both men have called home.
After suffering a terrible accident that leaves him physically handicapped, Alfonso faces intellectual crises during his university years, all of which move him down the path of his destiny.
The narrator depicts Young Alfonso caught between dual influences: his beloved, devout Catholic mother, Rafaelita, and the folk healer Agapita.
Because Alfonso ``didn\'t write his own biography,`` it falls to his childhood friend, the anonymous narrator here, to tell his story, through a series of letters addressed to a mysterious figure named K.
As this exquisite novel charts Alfonso\'s life journey from childhood through his education and evolution as a writer, renowned Chicano author Rudolfo Anaya invites readers to reflect on the truths and mysteries of the human condition.
What then unfolds is an elegiac song to the llanos of New Mexico where Alfonso comes of age.
Did she stamp those words into his destiny? The story of Alfonso, a Nuevo Mexicano, begins with his birth, when the curandera Agapita delivers these haunting words into his infant ear. ``The world is full of sorrow,`` Agapita whispered to Alfonso