

The Barbarian Nurseries
Author: Héctor Tobar
Narrator: Frankie J. Alvarez
Unabridged: 15 hr 59 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 09/27/2011
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction
Author: Héctor Tobar
Narrator: Frankie J. Alvarez
Unabridged: 15 hr 59 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Published: 09/27/2011
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction
Hector Tobar, now a weekly columnist for the Los Angeles Times, is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and a novelist. He is the author of Translation Nation and The Tattooed Soldier. The son of Guatemalan immigrants, he is a native of the city of Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife and three children.
Frankie J. Alvarez is a film and television actor best known for his roles as a gangster or thug. He has appeared on such television shows as 24, CSI: Miami, and Entourage, among others.
Let me be bold here: I think this book deserves to be a modern classic. Not because it's the greatest book I've ever read. I liked it a lot, but it falls short of true greatness. I am, however, comparing it to a lot of other classics I've read in the past few years, and in particular, the great melodr......more
I took a break from reading Buddenbrooks, Thomas Mann's early 20th Century tome about the collapse of an German family, to read about a modern Californian family's demise. Because we live in a time of hyper-descent, it takes the Torres-Thompson family less than a decade to accomplish what Bud......more
“Héctor Tobar’s novel is astonishing, like a many-layered mural on a long wall in Los Angeles, a tapestry of people and neighborhoods and stories. A vivid testament to Southern California as the world. Araceli is so unexpected and unique; she’s a character America needs to see, and this novel takes her on a journey America needs to understand.” Susan Straight, author of Highwire Moon
“If Hector Tobar turns out to be the Charles Dickens or the Tom Wolfe of the twenty-first century, he owes a big thank-you to the people of California…Yuppies, immigrants, politicians and vigilantes—Tobar has them all coming together in a Crash-like moment for a perfect California ending that will leave readers pondering the inconsistencies in the country’s dependence on illegal immigrants.” NPR
“Tobar delivers a riveting, insightful morality tale of conspicuously consuming Americans and their Mexican servants in the OC…His sharp eye for Southern California culture, spiraling plot twists, ecological awareness, and ample willingness to dole out comeuppance to the nauseatingly privileged may put readers in mind of T. C. Boyle.” Publishers Weekly
“Los Angeles Times journalist Tobar’s second novel is brimming with interwoven stories that form a vibrant portrait of his hometown of Los Angeles…The result is a marvelous pastiche of social commentary ensconced in a family domestic drama.” Booklist (starred review)
“Tobar’s superb multilayered novel defines the social divide of Southern California, emphasizing in a complex and human way that there are no black-and-white answers in the immigration debate.” Library Journal (starred review)
“Héctor Tobar’s The Barbarian Nurseries is that rare novel that redefines a city. It has the necessary vital sweep of culture and class that brings a city to life, but its power lies in Tobar’s ability to persuasively change the perspective from which the Los Angeles of the present—and by extension, the United States—is seen. This book confirms the promise of Tobar’s debut novel, The Tattooed Soldier.” Stuart Dybek, author of I Sailed with Magellan and The Coast of Chicago
“The Barbarian Nurseries is a huge novel of this century, as sprawling and exciting as Los Angeles itself, one that tracks a Mexican immigrant maid not only as static decor in ‘real’ America’s economic rise and fall. Like yard workers and cooks, construction laborers and seamstresses, Tobar’s Araceli has flesh, brains, dreams, ambition, history, culture, voice: a rich, generous life. A story that was demanded, we can celebrate that it is now here.” Dagoberto Gilb, author of Before the End, After the Beginning and The Flowers
“Easily switching among Spanglish and its parent languages, narrator Frankie Alvarez quickly draws the listener into the cultural mix of greater Los Angeles. His expressive reading connects the listener to the emotions of this intense look at the economic divisions of contemporary America.” AudioFile