Book Descriptions
for Taking Hold by Francisco Jiménez
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
This final book in Francisco Jiménez’s memoir cycle that began with The Circuit begins with his arrival at graduate school at Columbia University in the late 1960s. By the end, he has earned his master’s degree and Ph.D., married his college sweetheart, and started a family. Although he is already in adulthood when this account begins, much of what he describes is about learning to live in the larger, sometimes unknown world, a topic resonant and relevant for teens. He has to figure out transportation in New York, how he will afford to eat, how to buy an engagement ring when he proposes, and how to find an apartment once he gets married and moves out of the graduate student dorm. Jiménez’s personal values and faith influence his choices, especially with regard to his commitment to and belief in non-violence as he witnesses the anti-war protests of the late 1960s on campus. Most affecting, though, is when he discusses discovering the work of Mexican authors writing about experiences similar to his own family. The affirmation he felt reading literature by and about people like him was profound. Jiménez’s voice is earnest and appealing in this engaging offering. (Age 13 and older)
CCBC Choices 2016. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2016. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
In this fourth book in his award-winning memoir series, Francisco Jimenez leaves everything behind in California--a loving family, a devoted girlfriend, and the culture that shaped him-- to attend Columbia University in New York City.
With few true accounts of the Latino experience in America, Francisco Jimenez's work comes alive with telling details about the warmth and resiliency of family and the quest for identity against seemingly impossible odds.
"Many [students] have commented that your books give them hope and coruage and, thanks to you, many are seriously thinking about college for the first time in their lives" --John Padula, teacher, Boston Public Schools
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.