
Tomás Rivera (1934–1984)
Author of And the Earth Did Not Devour Him
About the Author
Works by Tomás Rivera
And The Earth Did Not Devour Him 14 copies
And the Earth Did Not Devour Him, with Related Readings (Glencoe Literature Library) (2000) 13 copies
...y no se lo tragó la tierra / ...And the Earth Did Not Devour Him (English and Spanish Edition) 11 copies
And the earth did not part 4 copies
Revista TANTRUM #3 1 copy
Associated Works
Sudden Fiction Latino: Short-Short Stories from the United States and Latin America (2010) — Contributor — 76 copies, 15 reviews
Hecho en Tejas: An Anthology of Texas-Mexican Literature (Southwestern Writers Collection) (2006) — Contributor — 32 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Rivera, Tomás
- Birthdate
- 1934-12-22
- Date of death
- 1984-05-16
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Southwest Texas Junior College (English)
Southwest Texas State University (BA|English)
University of Oklahoma (MA|Spanish; PhD|Romance languages and literature) - Occupations
- professor
college administrator
corporate office (Times Mirror Company)
secondary school teacher - Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
...and the earth did not devour him Guided Read in 75 Books Challenge for 2018 (December 2018)
Reviews
Quel libro!
...y no se le trago la tierra empieza con el cuento de un "ano perdido."
El narrador desconocido and otros migrantes Mexicanos dicen la historia
de amor, pobreza, familia, homicidios, y la perdida de espirito and confianza.
Sobre toda es el compasion para la raza.
Ahora, necesita una traducción nueva con mas poder y incluyendo todas
las palabras y frases.
...y no se le trago la tierra empieza con el cuento de un "ano perdido."
El narrador desconocido and otros migrantes Mexicanos dicen la historia
de amor, pobreza, familia, homicidios, y la perdida de espirito and confianza.
Sobre toda es el compasion para la raza.
Ahora, necesita una traducción nueva con mas poder y incluyendo todas
las palabras y frases.
By Tomas Rivera - Y No Se Lo Trago La Tierra/...and the Earth Did Not Devour Him (Bilingual) (7/16/87) by Tomás Rivera
This book, originally written in Spanish, describes in short vignettes the lives of Mexican American migrant workers in the '40's and '50's.
This is both thought provoking and horrific. There are so many awful incidents in this very short book: violent tragic deaths of childre and adults; workers, including children packed into a van so tightly they had to stand up for a several day trip to more northern fields; the constant abuse and harassment that the migrant children endured in local show more schools.
This book is eye opening and saddening. I am distressed to learn that current migrant workers face many of the same conditions.
Recommended especially for those interested in social justice issues. show less
This is both thought provoking and horrific. There are so many awful incidents in this very short book: violent tragic deaths of childre and adults; workers, including children packed into a van so tightly they had to stand up for a several day trip to more northern fields; the constant abuse and harassment that the migrant children endured in local show more schools.
This book is eye opening and saddening. I am distressed to learn that current migrant workers face many of the same conditions.
Recommended especially for those interested in social justice issues. show less
I read this five or six months ago. It's my favorite work of Latino/a literature. I think Juan Rulfo is one of the obvious influences, and, while I might be imposing my own literary background on Rivera, I'd like to think that Sherwood Anderson is the other. This book is something like Winesburg, Ohio, except it's about migrant workers and the narrator is a young boy who's hiding underneath a house (as I recall).
I really can't say enough about it, though. You should give it a try, because I show more felt that it did a really, really outstanding job of representing the experiences of people who came to the United States decades ago, working and living in places that were difficult to adapt to due to linguistic, cultural, and social barriers. Read this, and read Rulfo's short stories again, and see if you agree with my admittedly distant memory of the connection between the two. show less
I really can't say enough about it, though. You should give it a try, because I show more felt that it did a really, really outstanding job of representing the experiences of people who came to the United States decades ago, working and living in places that were difficult to adapt to due to linguistic, cultural, and social barriers. Read this, and read Rulfo's short stories again, and see if you agree with my admittedly distant memory of the connection between the two. show less
...y no se lo trago la tierra.... by Tomas Rivera or in other words ...And the earth did not devour him... was excellent, but I'm not sure how to tell you what it was. It was about Mexican-American immigrants based in a small town in Texas, which I believe is somewhat similar to Rivera's own personal background. Write what you know. The marketers describe the book as a novel, but it isn't. It isn't short stories either or vignettes. I'd like to call it an extended prose poem, one that spans show more a lifetime. It reminds me a little of the work of Letter to an Imaginary Friend by Tom McGrath that I read in college as a poetry major. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Also by
- 6
- Members
- 528
- Popularity
- #47,120
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 26
- Languages
- 2










