marilysevfigueroa
an unapologetic Scorpio
211 posts
Marilyse V. Figueroa | Queer femme Xicana & Puerto Riqueña writer, Artist-in-Residence @ The Writing Barn, Director of San Marcos, TX Chapter of Barrio Writers, and that Scorpio you've been warned about.
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marilysevfigueroa · 6 years ago
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I’M AGHAST AT ALL THE BOOKS I HAVEN’T READ
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                          Me when people ask "What are you reading?" 
I have just one answer to the question, “Have you read ___?” 
NO. 
I haven’t read your favorite childhood novel, the New York Times best sellers, or the winner of the Pulitzer Prize, OK?! When a movie based off a book comes out, you bet I absolutely did not read the book before seeing the movie. The point is, I’m under read and I know it. However, that doesn’t mean I don’t have reading goals or want to regularly attend a feminist book club one day…
The truth is, even I'm aghast at all the books I haven't read. You would think with a degree in English Lit and an MFA in Creative Writing, I would be a the raptor of reading. Yet, here I am, the bum of all English Majors and creative writers alike who just can't seem to finish her growing reading list. This means I buy, check out, or read the first chapter of all the books, but then I never quite get to know the pages inside. It's an annoying trap I fall into at every library book sale. Those poor $1 books have no clue their existence is going to continue being a sad, unread one.
So, what else is a procrastinating bibliophile to do but make a list for all the world to see that she'll finish at the ripe age of eighty? That’s not anxiety inducing at all...
What follows is a different kind of summer reading list. Since I’m a restless reader, a lot of these books are years old because they’ve been on my to-read list for a quite awhile. Some are new because I like to pretend I’ll read them within an appropriate amount of time. And to keep this series going, I'll keep making these book listicles with updates on my thoughts on the books and some writing prompts! But listen, if you follow my reading advice but don’t quite follow through, you won't be shamed by me. Sometimes finishing a great book is just not in the cards. I get it. As an added bonus, if you want to dance around reading these books, my links offer little activities and information around the work. You can check out the section where the Austin Public Library holds the book (even if you'll never visit it), you can do a writing prompt for a book before you read it (we will!!...eventually) or just order that .99 cent Kindle edition because #<3DEAL$.
I present, with full knowledge of the shame it carries, my 2018 summer reading list: 
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
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​This book fell into my oblivious lap literally because there was a sign outside my graduate office: Reading Thursday with Karen Russell. The book made me want to own it though because it has a young narrator and a fun premise: How a young girl deals with the death of her mother and the demise of her family’s amusement park called Swamplandia!, a Florida Alligator Wrestling Park. OK, “fun” might be the wrong word, but when you’re a snoozing reader like me, the one book I read a year has to pull out all the stops. Just in case I start reading it and pick it up months later, I’m going to be using this Knopf reading guide! 
Bodily Memory by Leticia Urieta
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​​Leticia Urieta is an Austin native. Her zines make me feel like anyone can come to her work and get whatever they need from it. Bodily Memory employs poetry, testimonio, and collage to tell the story of the ways women have been made to feel in their bodies. It’s uplifting as much as it i​​s honest. And as you can tell, I’m cheating a little on this because I’ve actually read this zine before. But I have this dream of being one of those readers who’s “read it like 5 times.” I’ve never had the patience to do such a thing, and I know with Urieta’s zine, it’ll be as rewarding as the first time. You can order Urieta’s zine on her website or check it out at Austin Public Library’s Zine Collection.
Bright Dead Things by Ada Limón 
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​​ I was lucky enough to hear Ada Limón read poems from Bright Dead Things last spring. In a way, it’s kind of like I’ve already started reading her work, right?? I know this beautiful orange book is going to have so many treasures waiting for me whenever I get the time to open it. The poems I have heard paint natural scenes without being your typical nature poem. She’s also hilarious in her poems and in person. If you don’t have time to read the complete collection, I’ve linked her reading here.
Great, right? Now we can chime in on our poet friends’ conversations with quips like, “I heard she wrote that after the election!” We’re gonna look so well read 😎
Chasing the Sun *and* Everyone Knows You Go Home by Natalia Sylvester
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Natalia Sylvester is another Austin resident via Miami and Peru. Chasing the Sun was her first novel and I’ve heard it’s stellar. I had met Sylvester at a reading and immediately wanted to read her work! Well, a year later I was ashamed to still see her book on my to-read list. Lucky for me, I’m also frugal to a point of embarrassment, so when I saw this novel on sale via Kindle I bought it right away. I’m currently reading it as fast as snail right now. I love how Sylvester describes the emotional life of her main character as he tries to get his wife back from kidnappers. Now, Everyone Knows You Go Home is one of the few new books on this list because I heard it was a banger! I’ve read countless reviews and interviews with Sylvester about her work (I managed to interview Sylvester for Front Porch Journal this past May). Roxanne Gay added this book to her reading list, and with that recommendation, we should all follow suit! Right now both books are half-off on Kindle, and it’s free if you have Kindle unlimited. So now you can actually stop putting it off and join me in reading this book in no less than two months, or until the fall reading list comes out 😜
Binti by Nnedi Okorafor
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​​Binti is another award-winning book that I’m aghast I haven't read. I have no excuse, but I will say I now own Book One of this trilogy, and it’s so short that I just might strap myself into a chair and finish it in one sitting (might being the prime word there.) Because I don’t get out and read much, I heard about Binti from a friend who does and recommended it to me because I love science fiction that takes place on spaceships. Unfortunately, I also know how Book One ends because I got to hear Okorafor read a portion of the work. This is why I need to read things more promptly  ¯\_(ツ)_/¯  If you’re not sure you can handle another book on your reading list, here is a link to The Verge’s Review of Okorafor’s work, or you can watch her amazing Ted Talk in which she reads an excerpt of Binti, or like me, you can find a reading to go to and feel just as satisfied as if you had read the book. 
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​​Just want to write something inspired by Binti? Here's a writing prompt by yours truly.
Like the protagonist, Binti, one day every person may have to make a choice that will clash with either their family's values, their personal beliefs, or their nation's laws, etc. Using the five senses, write a scene in your character's point of view wherein they describe how they have come to a decision that will change everything.
Deer Resistant Landscaping: Proven Advice and Strategies for Outwitting Deer and 20 Other Pesky Mammals by Neil Soderstrom
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​ As some of you know, I recently moved to the Writing Barn in Austin, Texas where I am the Artist-in-Residence. I’m living in a camper trailer on 7.5 wooded acres. And yes, there are deer! I love these long-necked does, but I have to tell you–they’re pissing me the frack off. They’ve eaten my mint and now the buds of my marigolds! So I’m taking my power back, and yeah, I’m going to repel the crap outta them. Do you have pesky mammal problems or advice on outwitting deer (who I call George, which I argue is genderless)? Send a note my way because there is no way in frosty hell that I can finish this book 😭
On my next reading list: I dream about being one of those people who has read Clarice Lispector, and remind you of how woefully under read I am. Oh yes, and how the deer are all named GEORGE, and you cannot change my mind.
And before you start your next reading list, don't forget to take the pledge, 
"I solemnly swear I'm up to no reading."  
P.S. Please comment with books you think I should have read by now. I probably won't read them, but I'll totally tell you how excited I am to learn they exist. (Snide remarks will be liked, judgmental posts will be deleted ಠ_ಥ)
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​​Marilyse V. Figueroa is a proud queer femme Xicana-Puerto Riqueña writer living in Austin, Texas. If you want to ask her what books she's reading, you must first buy her a drink. Contact her at [email protected].
And here's George: 
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Damn straight it’s not 🧐
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Sufjan Stevens makes all of our love songs (a description of Utopia)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Literary journals: Let’s make an issue for women of color!
Women of color: OK, then...*submits*
~months later~
Literary journals: why is everyone saying we only publish cis white men?! We had that one issue of colored women!
Women of color:
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Hot radical fire sign: Marxism, Marxism, Fanon!
Me, sensitive femme water sign: Feelings, feelings, Anzaldúa!
The two should never meet.
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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We're making zines at the Texas Teen Book Festival!! #ttbf17 #barriowriters @redsalmonarts @barriowriters (at St. Edward's University)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Yup, it's true! Support @riosdelaluz reading and get a book signed or visit her bigcartel page and buy a copy of this special book if you can 🌺 #books #bloom #booktour #riosdelaluz #atx #austin #bookwoman #itzanovella #brokenriverpress #xicanxwriters #chapinawriters
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Happy Birthday  Gloria E. Anzaldúa!
September 26th is the birthday of  Chicana dyke-feminist, tejana patlache poet,  and cultural theorist from the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas, Gloria Anzaldúa (1942-2004).  
 Anzaldúa is known for writing and editing pivotal, intersectional feminist works, including her most famous book,  Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987). In 1995, Anzaldúa was the first participant in the UWM Student Union Distinguished Lecture Series with her talk Aliens: The Dynamic Construction of the U.S. Chicana/Latina Experience. We were so happy to find something on Gloria in our collections–she is loved by many a librarian and archivist at UWM <3
From the UWM Student Union Collection, UWM AC 124, Box 39, Folder 10.
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Issue #36 of Front Porch is still rummaging newly in our minds. This week we are focusing on Matty Layne Glasglow and their evocative and awakened poem,
THE POWER(BOTTOM) IS YOURS
for Captain Planet
“I wanted you then–
all the silver-blue & crystalline
waves of muscle washing over your body. Your hydro-powered
biceps, turbine thighs, washboard abs. I imagined my tongue gliding
through every trough, pausing on each crest…”
Click here for the whole poem and more from Matty
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Tabula Rasa
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Our apologies for the break in content. We were busy searching for a new editor to steer this literary naval ship called a blog. Your captain into the unknown future going forward will be me, Brent. I’m a poetry graduate student here at Texas State who moonlights in writing science fiction novels along with ample amounts of blogging. I’ll do my best to balance for you on this Tumblr blog entertainment, literary relevance, humor, concurrent publishing trends, writing prompts, new and emerging writers and styles, in addition to the established Texas State MFA and Front Porch Journal happenings. Cheers to the uncast future and the molds we hold in our hands. Together we might discover an unknown shore, or perhaps another planet if you enjoy the company and stay on this journey long enough with me. (Artwork featured above is by Russian surrealist Vladimir Kush)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Ready for the @barriowriters Zine Workshop this Sunday 📓✊🏽📝 #barriowriters #bwaustin (at Creative Action)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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I'm here selling books and chapbooks of SantAna's Fairytales! Come for the reading & buy a book, too ☺ (at El Centro: The Center for the Study of Latino Media and Markets)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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I've so cherished being in the presence of a great human being & beautiful word maker, #oceanvuong. And I think both our outfits are great so 😉✌️❤ (at Katherine Anne Porter House)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Gracias @oceanvuong for coming to #txst! I have so much to think about & I love it. "Dear God, if you are a season, let it be the one I passed through to get here." - #oceanvuong (at Texas State University)
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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Long frackin' day
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Only relatable Rory moment✌🏽
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marilysevfigueroa · 7 years ago
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First day down! I am looking forward to the insights & challenges teaching in a college classroom will bring ✌️ #gradlyfe #teaching #txst (at Texas State University)
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