Photo de l'auteur

Elizabeth Borton de Trevino (1904–2001)

Auteur de Je suis Juan de Pareja

33 oeuvres 2,567 utilisateurs 22 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Exodus Provisions

Œuvres de Elizabeth Borton de Trevino

Je suis Juan de Pareja (1965) 1,893 exemplaires
El Güero: A True Adventure Story (1989) 137 exemplaires
Nacar: The White Deer (1963) 89 exemplaires
Pollyanna's Castle in Mexico (1934) 38 exemplaires
Casilda of the Rising Moon (1967) 35 exemplaires
Pollyanna's Door to Happiness (1936) 30 exemplaires
Pollyanna in Hollywood (1931) 28 exemplaires
Pollyanna's Golden Horseshoe (1930) 23 exemplaires
The Hearthstone of My Heart (1977) 19 exemplaires
Turi's Papa (1969) 18 exemplaires
Pollyanna and the Secret Mission (1951) 13 exemplaires
Leona: A Love Story (1994) 10 exemplaires
Where the heart is (1962) 6 exemplaires
Juarez, man of law (1974) 6 exemplaires
The House on Bitterness Street (1970) 5 exemplaires
The music within (1973) 4 exemplaires
The heart possessed: a love story (1978) 3 exemplaires
Here is Mexico (1970) 3 exemplaires
The fourth gift (1966) 3 exemplaires
A Carpet of Flowers (1955) 2 exemplaires
Even As You Love 2 exemplaires
I, Juan de Pareja 2 exemplaires
Among the innocent (1981) 2 exemplaires
Spiritual Journey 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Treviño, Mary Elizabeth Victoria Borton de
Autres noms
Borton, Mary Elizabeth (birth)
Date de naissance
1904-09-02
Date de décès
2001-12-02
Lieu de sépulture
Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Bakersfield, California, USA
Lieu du décès
Cuernavaca, Mexico
Lieux de résidence
Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico
Études
Stanford University (BA|Latin American History|1925)
Boston Conservatory of Music
Professions
journalist
novelist
poet
memoirist
Organisations
Boston Herald
Prix et distinctions
Phi Beta Kappa
Courte biographie
Elizabeth Borton knew she wanted to be a writer from childhood. She had her first success at age eight, when a local paper published one of her poems. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford, she went to Boston to study the violin, but soon was working as a reporter for The Boston Herald. In 1935 she married Luis Treviño Arreola y Gómez Sánchez de la Barquera and moved with him to Monterrey, Mexico. Her memoir My Heart Lies South (1953) became a bestseller and established her as a writer. She won a Newbery Medal in 1966 for I, Juan De Pareja.

Membres

Critiques

Juan de Pareja, our narrator, was a slave in the service of the famous Spanish artist, Velasquez. Spanish slavery of the time was evidently quite different from the brutal slavery of the American South, that we are all familiar with. Juan de Pareja was well treated, and indeed, loved by his master and mistress, and he in turn loved them. This fact naturally gives the book an uncomfortable "Uncle Tom" or "Song of the South" flavor to the narration. We modern readers do not really want to hear about slaves loving their owners. However, this novel is based on history. Pareja, Velasquez, and a few other major characters, were all real people. De Trevino has taken the little that is known about them, and used fiction and imagination to fill in the huge gaps in our knowledge. So this is historical fiction - not a biography. But it was fascinating to read in the brief afterward which parts of the story were definitely true.
Juan secretly taught himself to paint, by watching his master for so many years. And a few of Juan de Pareja's paintings survive today and are displayed in museums in Europe. But it was illegal in Spain for a slave to practice the arts. The episode in the story in which both Velasquez and the King of Spain himself discover that the famous artist's slave has been illegally painting is the highlight of the book, and according the the author, this episode is known and based on fact.
Unusual for a middle grade novel in that the narrator, though his story begins in childhood, is an adult through most of the book. Not many books for this age focus the story on adults.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
fingerpost | 15 autres critiques | Aug 14, 2021 |
I loved every page of this well written book; the author writes her own life story. This reporter from California marries a Mexican man, has two sons and becomes as nearly Mexican as any American woman can. They live first in Monterrey and then move to San Angel, in Mexico City where the boys grow up. It is delightfully written and hard to put down once started. I highly recommend it!
 
Signalé
CatheyMerrill | Aug 31, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
33
Membres
2,567
Popularité
#10,008
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
22
ISBN
68
Langues
3

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