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“My father told me about a killer who would tremble if he
hadn’t killed someone,” Patricia Cisneros Cisneros Young
recalled.
“I don’t know what possessed my father to tell me that story
about a year ago,” said Cisneros Cisneros Young, an adjunct
faculty member at UTB/TSC who took that account and others and
transformed them into “South Texas Tales: Stories My Father Told
Me,” a collection of nine short stories based on the lives of
people who lived in Brownsville and Matamoros.
“The people are real, the stories are fiction,” Cisneros
Cisneros Young explained. “So many people have stereotypical
views or perspectives of this area and they’re wrong. They don’t
understand the people who have lived here since 1749 and the
people who have built their homes, their lives, in this area. …
Many people have told me, after they have read my book, ‘You
know, I finally get it. … I understand how the Rio Grande is a
comma instead of a period in a sentence.’”
Cisneros Cisneros Young’s inspiration for the collection came
from her family and the stories her father would tell her as she
was growing up.
“He would tell us stories about people who lived in Brownsville/
Matamoros and I always imagined how they lived,” she said. “He
just turned 80 years old and I realized that if I didn’t write
these stories down, people’s names down, and start
fictionalizing their lives, giving them voice, they were going
to disappear. No one would ever know what Brownsville/Matamoros
is really like.”
The stories center on the universal themes of love and loss,
triumph and defeat.
Cisneros Young said she writes only “about what I know, the
[family] conversations that I’ve heard” while growing up.
She said her family was very religious.
“They clung to the rosary, you know, they clung to the church,”
Cisneros Cisneros Young said. “They were extremely faithful and
their faith was very simple.”
For the last three years, Cisneros Cisneros Young has been an
English teacher at Rivera High School. She graduated from UTB/TSC
with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English.
She credits Associate Professors Noor Islam and Teresa Cadena
and Professor Mimosa Stephenson with helping her become a
writer.
“Those professors helped shape and discipline my writing,”
Cisneros Young said. “They gave me the ability to write with
structure. [They] were amazingly instrumental with me becoming a
writer.”
She will sign copies of “South Texas Tales: Stories My Father
Told Me” ($12.99, Tate Publishing) at a brunch scheduled from 10
a.m. to noon May 17 at the Barnes & Noble Bookstore on campus.
“You will meet the characters again,” Cisneros Young said,
adding that the collection is the first volume in a trilogy.
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