119 episodes

A showcase of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, and humour by the LatinX diaspora.

LatinX Audio Lit Mag Teresa Douglas

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 2 Ratings

A showcase of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, and humour by the LatinX diaspora.

    Behind the Scenes with Roy Conboy, author of Tia Mary

    Behind the Scenes with Roy Conboy, author of Tia Mary

    If you write about family that's still living, do you still get to go to the family reunions? Can you really put pomegranate seeds in tacos and retain your Mexican license? Get the answer to these hard-hitting questions in this episode of Latinx Lit Audio Mag.

    Roy Conboy is a Mixed Blood Latino/Irish/Indigenous writer and teacher who’s poetic plays have been seen in the struggling black boxes on the edges of the mainstream theatre in Los Angeles, Santa Ana, San Francisco, San Antonio, Denver, and more; and whose musical plays for young people have toured extensively in California.  His poetry has been seen in Green Hills Literary Lantern, Orphic Lute, Third Estate’s Quaranzine, Freshwater Literary Journal, New American Writing, and featured on Latinx Lit Magazine’s podcast.  His poetic radio drama Hue can be heard online at Barewire Theatre Company.  As an educator he taught for 35 years, including three decades as the head of the San Francisco State University playwrighting program where he created multiple programs that gave thousands of students of diverse ethnicities, genders, and backgrounds a place to find and raise their voices.



    Check out his work at royconboy.net.

    • 34 min
    Poetry: Tia Mary by Roy Conboy

    Poetry: Tia Mary by Roy Conboy

    Roy's poem Tia Mary combines playfulness and poignancy in one beautiful punch.



    Roy Conboy is a Mixed Blood Latino/Irish/Indigenous writer and teacher who’s poetic plays have been seen in the struggling black boxes on the edges of the mainstream theatre in Los Angeles, Santa Ana, San Francisco, San Antonio, Denver, and more; and whose musical plays for young people have toured extensively in California.  His poetry has been seen in Green Hills Literary Lantern, Orphic Lute, Third Estate’s Quaranzine, Freshwater Literary Journal, New American Writing, and featured on the Latinx Lit  podcast.  His poetic radio drama Hue can be heard online at Barewire Theatre Company.  As an educator he taught for 35 years, including three decades as the head of the San Francisco State University playwrighting program where he created multiple programs that gave thousands of students of diverse ethnicities, genders, and backgrounds a place to find and raise their voices.

    You can catch his work at royconboy.net

    • 4 min
    Behind the Scenes with Kase Johnstun, author of Corridos and Tragedias: I Will No Longer Erase Us, Or Let You Erase Us

    Behind the Scenes with Kase Johnstun, author of Corridos and Tragedias: I Will No Longer Erase Us, Or Let You Erase Us

    Do the people who don't claim you have any right to decide who you are? Check out this behind the scenes with Kate Johnstun as he shares his family story and identity.



    Kase Johnston is an award-winning novelist, essayist, and memoirist. He lives in Ogden, Utah, with his small family, and is on the board of Label Me Latina/o literary journal — just a writer who has been grappling with identity his whole life.

    Author: 'Cast Away' (forthcoming from Torrey House Press, 2024). You can buy the new book now!⁠⁠ https://www.torreyhouse.org/let-the-wild-grasses-grow ⁠

    'Let the Wild Grasses Grow' (Torrey House Press, 2021), Finalist High Plains Book Award, Fiction, 2022, Women’s National Book Association Great Group Read 2022

    And 'Beyond the Grip of Craniosynostosis (McFarland & Co, 2015), Winner of the 2015 Gold Quill, League of Utah Writers

    Co author/editor: Utah Reflections: Stories from the Wasatch Front (History Press, 2014) Host, The LITerally Podcast - ⁠http://www.thebanyancollective.com/literally/⁠

     

    • 32 min
    Nonfiction: Corridos and Tragedias: I Will No Longer Erase Us, Or Let You Erase Us by Kase Jonstun

    Nonfiction: Corridos and Tragedias: I Will No Longer Erase Us, Or Let You Erase Us by Kase Jonstun

    "By the time I was old enough to know, they only spoke in Spanish when they fought or when they swore. Then he would lift his hand and spin his finger around, directing me to dance while the first chords of La Cucaracha sang from his guitar. “La cucaracha y no puedo caminar.”

    And he always sang the version that included “marijuana que fumar,” and he would get another side glance and laugh from grandma. Growing up, I thought this was the original and only version of the song. I had to look it up years later to learn that it has been around for decades but it’s not the version most grandfathers teach their grandchildren.

    With this, for my grandpa Cordova, was par for the course on just about everything he taught us. If there was a dirty version of a song or a joke, that’s the one we heard."



    Kase Johnston is an award-winning novelist, essayist, and memoirist. He lives in Ogden, Utah, with his small family, and is on the board of Label Me Latina/o literary journal — just a writer who has been grappling with identity his whole life.

    Author: 'Cast Away' (forthcoming from Torrey House Press, 2024). You can buy the new book now!⁠ https://www.torreyhouse.org/let-the-wild-grasses-grow

    'Let the Wild Grasses Grow' (Torrey House Press, 2021), Finalist High Plains Book Award, Fiction, 2022, Women’s National Book Association Great Group Read 2022

    And 'Beyond the Grip of Craniosynostosis (McFarland & Co, 2015), Winner of the 2015 Gold Quill, League of Utah Writers

    Co author/editor: Utah Reflections: Stories from the Wasatch Front (History Press, 2014)Host, The LITerally Podcast - http://www.thebanyancollective.com/literally/

    • 17 min
    Behind the Scenes with Luna Vallejo, author of 'The Star Spangled Banner'

    Behind the Scenes with Luna Vallejo, author of 'The Star Spangled Banner'

    Can Alfredo Pasta really cure the blues? And is a national anthem just a cringey throwback to different times? Get the answers to these questions and more in this week's Behind the Scenes with Luna Vallejo.



    Luna Vallejo is a 17-year-old writer who hails from Staten Island, New York with Mexican and Honduran roots. Luna is the founder and editor-in-chief of Neverland Lit, an international youth literary magazine that strives to amplify the voices of marginalized and emerging writers. When she’s not writing, you can find her listening to Lorde, stargazing, and re-reading Anthony Doerr novels.

    • 19 min
    Poetry: Star Spangled Banner by Luna Vallejo

    Poetry: Star Spangled Banner by Luna Vallejo

    "The Star-Spangled Banner

    Is more than just a national anthem, it's the sanctified song millions of immigrants sing under their breath as their brittle backbones bend over strawberry fields slick with dew to convince themselves that America can still see their silhouettes even when their sandpaper skin isn't drenched in the dawn's early light..."



    Luna Vallejo is a 17-year-old writer who hails from Staten Island, New York with Mexican and Honduran roots. Luna is the founder and editor-in-chief of Neverland Lit, an international youth literary magazine that strives to amplify the voices of marginalized and emerging writers. When she’s not writing, you can find her listening to Lorde, stargazing, and re-reading Anthony Doerr novels.

    • 4 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
2 Ratings

2 Ratings

Top Podcasts In Arts

Fresh Air
NPR
Add to Cart with Kulap Vilaysack & SuChin Pak
Lemonada Media
The Moth
The Moth
99% Invisible
Roman Mars
Fashion People
Audacy | Puck
Fantasy Fangirls
Fantasy Fangirls