Product Details
The Flowers: A Novel

The Flowers: A Novel
By Dagoberto Gilb

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Featured: February 4, 2008

Product Description

Sonny Bravo is a tender, unusually smart fifteen-year-old who is living with his vivacious mother in a large city where intense prejudice is not just white against black, but also brown. When Sonny’s mother, Silvia, suddenly marries an Okie building contractor named Cloyd Longpre, they are uprooted to a small apartment building, Los Flores. As Sonny sweeps its sidewalks, he meets his neighbors and becomes ensnared in their lives: Cindy, an eighteen-year-old druggie who is married and bored; Nica, a cloistered Mexican girl who cares for her infant brother but who is never allowed to leave their unit. The other tenants range from Pink, an albino black man who sells old cars in front of the building, to Bud, a muscled-up construction worker who hates blacks and Mexicans, even while he’s married to a Mexican-American woman. Dagoberto Gilb, in arguably his most powerful work yet, has written an inspiring novel about hate, pain, anger, and love that transcends age, race, and time. Gilb’s novel displays the fearlessness and wit that have helped make him one of this country’s most authentic and original voices.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #609442 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-01-21
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 256 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Gilb's new novel is hilarious and thought provoking as it traces the bigotry and alienation among the wildly varied cast of characters living in and around the Los Flores apartment building in an unnamed city that may remind some readers of Los Angeles. When narrator Sonny Bravo's mother, Silvia, marries Cloyd Longpre, the tightfisted landlord of Los Flores, Sonny is thrust into a racially charged environment on the brink of exploding. Sonny is an isolated teen whose only friends are the tragically dorky duo, Mike and Joe, from his new high school. He finds comfort in the menial chores Cloyd assigns him, as they give him a chance to escape the stifling apartment and to interact with the other residents, including Mr. Pinkston (known as Pink), an African-American albino who sells vintage cars to black customers in front of the building; Cindy, a broke and married teenage dropout looking for some fun; and Nica, a teen who is locked inside her apartment all day taking care of her brother. Racial tension boils over in the world outside Los Flores as Sonny navigates Cindy's advances and falls for Nica. Gilb (Gritos; Woodcuts of Women) offers sharp commentary via his quick-witted narrator, and the reader feels Sonny's disaffection as his world dissolves into chaos. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine
Dagoberto Gilb, winner of the PEN/Hemmingway award for his 1994 short story collection The Magic of Blood, hasn’t written a novel since The Last Known Residence of Mickey Acuña (1994). With The Flowers, he has blazed back onto the literary scene. Once again, he earns rave reviews from critics who universally praised his ability to capture the rhythms of working-class life and speech. A slow start and a much-too-sophisticated Sonny distracted a few critics, but these were minor complaints. Though Gilb’s newest novel deals poignantly with matters of race, the Dallas Morning News expressed an opinion echoed by many other reviewers about the widespread applicability of The Flower’s themes: “Let’s hope Mr. Gilb’s book isn’t pegged solely as Latino literature. The issues it explores are universally relevant in our shrinking world.”
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.

From Booklist
Too young to drive but old enough to catch the eye of a dangerously bored and sexy married neighbor, Chicano Sonny Bravo has to walk a thin line to survive in the Flowers, an apartment building owned by Cloyd, his hard-drinking, evil-tempered Okie stepfather. Sonny willingly does most of the chores Cloyd assigns, but things get complicated as he is drawn into the lives of the tenants, including wheeler-dealer Pink, mean racist Bud, and pretty and indentured Nica. Sonny can’t stop himself from balancing insults with theft, while riots ignite in the trash-strewn streets in the wake of a police assault on a black man. A fiery essayist, short story writer, and novelist, Gilb expresses sympathy for women under the thumb of angry, threatened men while vividly portraying a romantic, vulnerable, yet calculating and resilient young man coming of age in a storm of prejudice. With a scorching sense of humor, a keen ear for dialogue, and a gift for creating microcosms, Gilb tells a suspenseful tale of loneliness, rage, yearning, and hope. --Donna Seaman


Customer Reviews

Colors, sounds and texture...Synesthesia?5
I picked up this book in San Francisco after hearing the author read an excerpt. I was moved by Dagoberto Gilb's spoken word. His prose in print was very much as his natural speaking voice--deliberate, honest and direct. I loved this book! I loved his use of colors, sounds and texture. I loved his choice of words, language (English, Spanglish, Spanish and French) and silence. I loved how he painted a real picture of society. The Flowers, is a bouquet of class, race, age and gender and the problems that connect and disconnect us.

Don't be confused by Sonny's thoughts that are infused with shapes that bounce and blend into different shades. Dagoberto Gilb uses Sonny Bravo's synesthesia to paint a world of colors that clash, combine and enlighten. This is the first novel that I read where synesthesia seems to take on a character form by interacting with the sounds of the city and the people, the emotions of a young man experiencing love, lust and displacement, and the feelings of anger, justice and fear. This book is not about black and white, it is dark and gray with rays of a piercing white light that encompasses all colors and feelings of hope, happiness and opportunity.

An added bonus: If you don't have synesthesia, you will definitely get an insight of how one senses shapes and colors in the frontal lobe area. Trust me, it is not something brought on by the use of psychedelic drugs.

our lady de los flores5
The heart of the story's in that opening scene, where the protagonist, 15-year-old (or thereabouts) Sonny Bravo must face sexy and sometimes larcenous mother's irate suitor/employer, pissed 'cos mom's ripped him off, who comes kicking down the front door of Sonny's house, overpowering the kid, kicking his dog and injuring him with his own butcher knife. The tornadoes stirred up in Mother's wake continue to blow through young Sonny's life, landing him a role as stepson to an Okie yokel named Cloyd, whom mother, in her haste to escape earlier consequences, it is implied, has married. Cloyd owns the small apartment complex after which the novel is named, the FLowers.

There's a kind of circular plot at work here. Like a hot southern cal wind spreading wildfires, it blows through that opening, spreading it first into the surrounding apartments at the Flowers, where other fires burn, fires of hateful racial prejudice, fires of sad, wasted girls pining lonely in night-time rooms, fires of adolescent sex-urge, of a youth's own moral conflicts and misplaced violence. These smaller personal fires then reach toward the city beyond, and finally even into history, as the fictional events here begin to resemble the actual, eg., the start of the '65 riots in LA.

Does the Flowers pay homage to Jean Genet? Dished out in the narrative voice of a broken home kid who, strangely enough, is trying to learn French. Notre dame des fleurs...Our Lady de las Flores. The Flowers. Read it.

A Must Read5
This novel narrated by Sonny Bravo, a wise and deep thinking fifteen year-old boy, reveals a story from a city where prejudice is intense not just between the white against black, but also the brown. When Sonny's mother, Silvia, suddenly marries the Okie building contractor, Cloyd Longpre, mother and son are uprooted to a small apartment building, where as Sonny sweeps its sidewalks, he meets his neighbors and becomes caught up in their lives. This cast of characters takes Sonny into the worlds of eighteen-year-old Cindy, who's boring marriage gives her an excuse to dose; then there is Nica, a the sheltered Mexican girl who care takes her infant brother but is a prisoner to her apartment. The other tenants range an albino black man named Pink, who sells old cars in front of the building, to Bud, a iron-pumping construction worker, whose prejudice is outward despite his marriage to a Mexican-American woman. Within the stories contained in this novel, narrated to us by Sonny, we are exposed to Gilb's most powerful work yet. Sonny's experiences transcend age, race, and time to reveal the fearlessness and wit that make Dagoberto Gilb one of the best voices in America Literature today. This is a book not to be missed.