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America del Norte

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

America del Norte

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781641296809

Publisher:

Soho Press

Imprint:

Soho Press

Publication Date:

6th May 2025

UK Publication Date:

8th April 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

480

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 209mm

Description

Moving between New York City, Mexico City, and Iowa City, a young member of the Mexican elite sees his life splinter in a centuries-spanning debut that blends the Latin American traditions of Roberto Bolano and Fernanda Melchor with the autofiction of US writers like Ben Lerner and Teju Cole. Moving between New York City, Mexico City, and Iowa City, a young member of the Mexican elite sees his life splinter in a centuries-spanning debut that blends the Latin American traditions of Roberto Bolano and Fernanda Melchor with the autofiction of US writers like Ben Lerner and Teju Cole. Sebastian lived a childhood of privilege in Mexico City. Now in his twenties, he has a degree from Yale, an American girlfriend, and a slot in the University of Iowa's MFA program. But Sebastian's life is shaken by the Trump administration's restrictions on immigrants, his mother's terminal cancer, the cracks in his relationship, and his father's forced resignation at the hands of Mexico's new president. As he struggles through the Trump and L pez Obrador years, Sebastian must confront his father's role in the Mexican drug war and navigate his whiteness in Mexican contexts even as he is often perceived as a person of color in the US. As he does so, the novel moves through centuries of Mexican literary history, from the 17th century letters of a peevishly polymathic Spanish colonizer to the contemporary packaging of Mexican writers for a US audience. Split between the US and Mexico, this stunning debut explores whiteness, power, immigration, and the history of Mexican literature, to wrestle with the contradictory relationship between two countries bound by geography and torn apart by politics.

Reviews

Praise for Amrica del Norte

The Millions Most Anticipated Books of Spring

The grandiose title of Nicols Medina Moras first novel, Amrica del Norte (North America), gives a good sense of its ironic tone and its unabashed desire to include everything on the continent, past and present: Hernn Corts, Montezuma, NAFTA, the war on drugs, Trump, AMLO, Jos Vasconcelos, Alfonso Reyes, the murdered students of Ayotzinapaeven the Iowa Writers Workshop . . .Medina Mora is a novelist full of promise.
The New York Times Book Review

Nicols Medina Mora is a one-man Boom latinoamericano!
Joshua Cohen, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of The Netanyahus

Hyper-intellectual, Bolao-esque critique of our modern age Yes. A Doris Lessing-style meta-text about the process of creation Also, yes. A frank treatise on USMexico relations post-NAFTA, with incendiary takedowns of systems like racism, colonialism, privilege, and power that corrupts both countries Absolutamente! . . . Amrica del Norte is funny, tragic, sprawling, self-indulgent, dirty, beautiful, and complicated.
Elizabeth Gonzalez James, The Rumpus

A Mexican politicians son tries to build a literary career in the US, yielding reflections on both countries elites.
Americas Quarterly

Brilliant Mexican journalist Nicols Medina Moras debut novel is a thrill an expansive, ambitious, self-assured story . . .Medina Mora masterfully interweaves Sebastins personal and political experiencesTrumps attacks on immigrants, his mothers cancer, and an up-and-down romance with an American girlfriend with a Latin fetishwith centuries of Mexican colonial history.
Bustle

[A] discursive, often brilliant, emotional novel about a young writer. . . [Amrica del Norte] is blindingly ambitious, and almost always successful. Mora aspires to combine his personal bildungsroman with an idiosyncratic and readable history of Mexico, a love story, and some trenchant social satire.
Yale Alumni Magazine

A uniquely twenty-first century voice: Nicols Medina Mora is equally fluent in three literary traditionsMexican, American, European. The advantages and gifts to literature of this situation are manifold, surprising, and humane. In this novel, he charts a course between history and literature and is borne aloft by these wavesthe voice of the NAFTA generation, and much more.
MarcoRoth, founding co-editor of n+1 and author of The Scientists

Amrica del Norte is for the adventurous. Its tale of a young Mexican man coming of age between Mexico City, New York City, and Iowa City melds genresincluding romance, etymological history, migration narrative, geopolitical analysis, and morewithout fear, showing us that literature can be so much more than we know. Read this to remember the wonder of learning that ink on the page could mean something and that pages bound between two covers could contain a world.
Elias Rodriques, author of All the Water Ive Seen Is Running

Heres the thing about Nico Medina Mora's debut novel: it reads like his tenth. It feels like the kind of casually elegant and elastically curious book that a master storyteller would spend a lifetime working toward. And yet, Amrica delNorte sings to us through both its jubilant imagination and wounded intelligence so that we might all get a glimpse at a brand-new way of writing the world.
John D'Agata, author of About a Mountain

A piercing critique of the shallowness of academia and the souffllike weightlessness of American culture . . . A debut from an author to keep on your radar, assured, darkly funny, and impeccably written.
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review

Incisive and witty . . . The author casts a wry look at the absurdities of American writing programs and of Trumps immigration policies, but what makes this special are his insights on the inner drive of aspiring artists and thinkers. Its an arresting novel of ideas.
Publishers Weekly

Author Bio

Nicolas Medina Mora was born and raised in Mexico City. He has degrees from Yale University and the writing program of the University of Iowa, and has worked in New York City as a journalist at Reuters and BuzzFeed.His writing has appeared in The Nation, The New York Times, and n+1, where he won the 2023 n+1 Writers' Fellowship. He lives in Mexico City, where he is a writer and editor for Revista Nexos.

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