Reviews for Enlarge Image The Border Between Us: A Novel
Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
A Mexican American aspiring artist pursues his dream despite harsh political, geographic, and familial realities. In 1977, 9-year-old Ramón Lopez, born in the U.S. near the border with Mexico, dreams of an adult life in New York City as a celebrated artist. His family’s fraught dynamics serve as both an inspiration and a roadblock to his pursuit. His father sells tires and covertly transports undocumented Mexican immigrants, including children and babies, across the border by hiding them beneath the tires he carts every day. Ramón’s newborn brother is developmentally disabled. With an abundance of care and incisiveness, the novel charts Ramón’s journey and inner turmoil. Ruiz’s prose is lively, and his insights into daily life at the border are authoritative: “Beggars lined the street, shambling in grimy rags, shaking rusted cups jingling with loose change. Cars snaked towards the crossing. The queue would swell throughout the day. At the right instant, crossing could take merely five minutes, but during busy times it might consume an hour. Radiators would rebel. Steam would hiss. Tempers would flare….What did the innocent know about immigration officials and drug-sniffing German Shepherds salivating over the slope of the bridge? What did the baby comprehend about being discreet while breaking the law?” Ruiz is examining timely issues while remaining focused on the humanity of the immigrants, their desperation and desires. Seeing Ramón’s creative aspirations as representative of the immigrant border crossing, his father tells him, “You have to stick with it. And here, unlike south of the river, you have a chance to make it. That’s why we’re here. That’s why it’s called the American Dream, not the Mexican Dream.” A moving story of one family’s toil amid a cultural struggle, told with precision and authenticity. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.