Papalotero

Front Cover
Editorial Ink, 2012 - Fiction

Included author´s voice.

Teresa Jones’s dreams of flying contrast sharply with her dreary, earthbound life working as a filing-clerk in a CD store, and suffering the constant nagging of her academic parents, who are outraged at her stubborn refusal to go to college. Her best friend – the popular, successful and apparently happy college freshman Elena Kravchuk – has the perfect prescription for Teresa’s depression: she needs to get laid. When the two girls meet Miguel Angel Ramirez, a misfit Mexican immigrant who builds and flies kites for a living, Elena goes to work as match-maker to bring him together for a casual fling with her socially awkward, chronically depressed best friend. But rather than providing a one night stand, this papalotero will transform the lives of both girls in ways that neither one bargained for: Elena will confront the truth that her life is not as perfect as she so desperately wants people to believe it is, while Teresa will be challenged to give up her low self-esteem and Life Sucks t-shirts, and discover that the happiness she thinks is out of her reach might actually be just one small leap of faith away.

From inside the book

Contents

Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
Section 5
Section 6
Section 7
Section 8
Section 14
Section 15
Section 16
Section 17
Section 18
Section 19
Section 20
Section 21

Section 9
Section 10
Section 11
Section 12
Section 13
Section 22
Section 23
Section 24
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2012)

Is a writer and Spanish-English translator with a bachelor’s degree in Literary Studies and a master’s degree in Translation Studies. His short stories have been published in numerous literary online and print journals, such as Hidden Agenda, Crossfire, Other Voices and Pens on Fire, and also in the anthologies Fantastic! (Oxford University Press, 2003) and Antares 2009: Literary and Artistic Creativity (Antares, 2009). He also has numerous published works to his credit as a translator, including the books In the Name of the Son by Mario G. Huacuja, José Luis Díaz’s The Whirling of the Serpent (Antares, 2009) and The Neoliberal Pattern of Domination by José Manuel Sánchez Bermúdez (Brill, 2012). He currently lives in Toronto, Canada, with his wife and daughter, and is manager of the translation agency Diálogos Intercultural Services.

Bibliographic information