Oh, Carey McWilliams! His name pops up whenever I chat with friends about essential reads on U.S. Latino history. 'North from Mexico' is one of those foundational texts that somehow manages to be both scholarly and deeply personal. McWilliams wrote with such empathy—you can tell he genuinely cared about giving voice to marginalized stories. Fun side note: he also edited 'The Nation' magazine and fought against Japanese internment during WWII. Dude was a powerhouse of integrity.
Carey McWilliams penned this classic, and honestly? It ruined other history books for me. His ability to connect 19th-century land grabs to modern-day inequities is masterful. Every time I reread it, I catch some new detail—like how he traces the roots of Chicano activism. Total game-changer.
I stumbled upon 'North from Mexico' while digging into Chicano history for a personal project, and it completely reshaped my understanding of Mexican-American contributions. The author, Carey McWilliams, was this brilliant journalist-turned-historian who wrote it back in 1948—way ahead of his time. His work reads like a love letter to overlooked communities, blending sharp analysis with vivid storytelling. What blows my mind is how relevant it still feels today, especially when discussing immigration or cultural identity.
McWilliams wasn’t just an academic; he had this activist streak that seeped into his writing. The book tackles everything from land disputes to labor struggles, but never loses its human touch. After reading, I fell down a rabbit hole of his other works like 'Factories in the Field'—guy had a knack for exposing systemic injustices with grace.
My tattered copy of 'North from Mexico' has sticky notes bursting from the pages—that’s how impactful McWilliams’ research was for me. He pioneered the study of Mexican-American experiences before it was 'cool' in academia, weaving together legal history, oral traditions, and grassroots perspectives. I particularly adore how he debunks stereotypes about passive migrant workers; his chapters on resistance movements are downright inspiring. It’s wild that more people don’t know about him outside ethnic studies circles.
2025-12-17 11:33:29
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Buku Terkait
The Carrero Contract (series book 3)
L.T.Marshall
10
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CAMILLA WALTERS thought she had come to the end of the road when fate caught up with her. No where left to run or hide, on the verge of becoming fish food at the hands of drug runners she owed a lot of money to.
That was until fate brought her ALEXI, head of the family CARRERO - The unexpected hero who saved her ass and changed her life in one easy manouvre.
Who knew she would have to sign her soul over to the devil in a bid to stay alive and in doing so, lose her heart and mind in the process.
This is not your typical hearts and roses story - Let the games begin and the war commence.
This is book 7 in The Carrero Series, although you can read this without prior books. There are back story hints from previous books worked in, so this new trio can be read alone.
For a fuller understanding then start with The Carrero Effect .
Pedro Marquez has built his life on control, power, and emotional distance. In his world, attachment is dangerous—and love is a liability he cannot afford. When a betrayal inside his empire forces him back to Havana, he is reminded of the one life he left behind… and the people who still see him as family.
Dante welcomes him like nothing has changed. Cassie still treats him like home.
But it is Michelle—Dante’s daughter—who unsettles him the most. She is no longer the little girl he once knew, but a woman whose presence awakens something dangerous in him.
She is nineteen now. Beautiful, emotional, and far too open in the way she looks at him.
For Michelle, Pedro was her childhood comfort, her first hero, and the man who once made her feel safe in a world where she often felt alone. His sudden return awakens everything she thought she had outgrown… and everything she was never meant to feel.
What begins as a reunion quickly becomes tension neither of them understands. Michelle’s affection grows into something deeper, while Pedro fights a constant war within himself—torn between desire, guilt, and loyalty to Dante, his best friend.
He knows he should stay away, because she is too young. And Dante was like a brother in everything but blood.
And he knows his world destroys anything pure it touches.
Pedro doesn't love or makes love he fucks and Michelle was too innocent for him.
But then.
She doesn’t know how to let go.
My grandfather was a thief.
He stole my grandmother’s name and her identity. He used them to escape a poor, forgotten corner of the rural West, then ran off with another woman.
He became a law professor, standing at podiums and lecturing about justice.
She became a famous painter, giving interviews about integrity.
My grandmother spent her whole life trapped in that same dying farmland. Everyone called her an old maid.
She never stopped waiting for him. Not even on her deathbed.
Fifty years later, I clawed my way out of that godforsaken place on the strength of two generations, my grandmother and my mother. I made partner at a top law firm.
It was graduation season. I sat in the lead interviewer’s chair.
Across from me sat a girl. Polished. Confident. The most outstanding graduate from the best law school in the state.
I opened her résumé and flipped through it page by page.
Then I stopped at the family information section.
I stared at that name for a very long time.
I looked up at her and said quietly, “You didn’t get the job.”
All her life, Raine had lived in her father’s shadow, ‘the Serpent’s princess,’ trapped in a world built on blood and stern control.
Then came Cole: a scarred ex-soldier, way older, dangerous, and a part of her father’s rival club who has made her feel seen for the very first time. Their affair is a crime, and their forbidden love a death sentence.
But when secrets come to light and betrayal bleeds through every oath, Raine must decide, will she save her father’s empire? or will she burn it down for the very man she was never meant to love.
Meet Esmerelda Sleuth. Sleuth is her name and investigating is her game. (Paranormal Investigating, that is.)
Esmerelda makes a good living as an investigator in a rather progressive firm. She lives a stable and sensible life until she meets Lance; an old money "hottie" who works for a real estate firm next to her building. After accepting an invitation for a weekend getaway party, she quickly discovers that Lance has a secret. He is wealthy. That part is true. And, yes, he's procured a job as a realtor in the building next door. His secret is that he belongs to an underground society of humans who didn't abandon their connection to magic centuries ago when religion declared it evil and he has traveled through time specifically to find her and bring her back to his time to marry him. If that isn't enough of a far fetched tale to absorb, he informs her that she was born in his time to a family belonging to that same secret society and was promised in marriage to him as an infant. When enemies who didn't want to see the union of families take place made attempts on her life, her parents sent her into the future and erased her memories of them as a precaution.
Possessing virtually no belief in magic, ghosts, psychics, time travel, etc., it takes some doing on Lance's part to convince her to believe his story and go back with him. When she does, the lies, deceit and attempts on her life start all over again. Will she escape emotionally and physically unscathed?
"The Other Side Of the Mirror" is a steamy-paranormal-romance- mystery-thriller and book one of the Esmerelda Sleuth series.
Due to Alexa’s broken heart, she was forced to return to the hacienda she had left seven years ago.
She left and lived her life in the city because of Aslan. Aslan was a 33-year-old man adopted by her parents, but he became her mother’s affair.
As much as possible, Alexa didn’t want to see the man anymore, the one who stole her inheritance and her mother. Aslan took everything that should have been hers.
And now that she’s back at the Escobar hacienda, she would reclaim what was rightfully hers as the only child and sole heiress from the man everyone calls the rancher, who is actually a fake.
The novel 'América del Norte' is actually written by the Mexican author Nicolás Medina Mora. I stumbled upon this book during one of my deep dives into contemporary Latin American literature, and it immediately caught my attention because of its sharp, almost satirical take on identity and migration. Medina Mora has this way of blending humor with deep existential questions, making the narrative both light-hearted and profoundly thought-provoking. The book follows a young Mexican diplomat who grapples with his sense of belonging while navigating the complexities of U.S.-Mexico relations. It's one of those rare reads that manages to be politically relevant without losing its emotional core.
What really stuck with me was how Medina Mora captures the absurdity of bureaucratic systems and the personal toll they take. His prose is crisp, and his observations are painfully accurate, especially if you've ever felt caught between cultures. I'd recommend 'América del Norte' to anyone interested in stories about displacement, but also to those who just enjoy a well-crafted, witty novel. It's not every day you find a book that makes you laugh while also making you question your place in the world.
Finding free online copies of older academic books like 'North from Mexico' can be tricky, but there are a few avenues worth exploring. I’ve stumbled upon out-of-print titles through Open Library, which sometimes offers borrowable digital versions. Their lending system feels like a virtual library card—super nostalgic for someone who grew up hunting for books in dusty stacks. Archive.org is another treasure trove; their digitized collections include hard-to-find historical works. Just type the title into their search bar and cross your fingers.
If those don’t pan out, checking university repositories might help. Some institutions digitize materials for public access, especially for culturally significant texts like this one. I once found a 1940s sociology thesis this way! While not identical to the book, it led me to related primary sources that enriched my understanding of the topic. The hunt’s half the fun—though I’ll admit, sometimes you’ve gotta settle for snippets on Google Books.
I’ve been digging into historical texts lately, and 'North from Mexico' caught my eye as a foundational work on Chicano history. While I don’t have a direct link to a PDF, I’d recommend checking academic databases like JSTOR or Project MUSE—they often host older scholarly works. Public libraries sometimes offer digital copies through OverDrive or Hoopla too.
If you’re into this topic, Carey McWilliams’ other books like 'Factories in the Field' are worth exploring. They weave together labor and migration stories in a way that still feels urgent today. The hunt for obscure texts is half the fun!
Reading 'North from Mexico' was like uncovering layers of history I never learned in school. Carey McWilliams argues that Mexican-American contributions to the U.S. have been systematically erased or minimized, framing their presence as integral to the nation's development—from colonial settlements to labor movements. He dismantles the myth of passive assimilation, highlighting resistance like the 1847 Taos Revolt and mutual aid societies. What stuck with me was how he connects early land dispossession to modern inequalities, making it feel less like a textbook and more like uncovering family stories.
I kept thinking about how his critique of 'border culture' being treated as 'foreign' mirrors today's debates. The book’s insistence that Mexican-Americans shaped industries (mining, railroads) while being denied credit reminded me of my abuelo’s stories about working in Texas fields. McWilliams doesn’t just cite facts; he shows how stereotypes became tools of oppression, which hit hard when I compared it to recent headlines about immigration.
Finding free downloads for books like 'North from Mexico: The Spanish-Speaking People of the United States' can be tricky. While I’ve stumbled across sites claiming to offer PDFs or ePub versions, I’m always cautious about legality and quality. Many academic texts aren’t freely available due to copyright, but libraries sometimes offer digital loans. I once borrowed it through my local library’s Overdrive system—totally legal and hassle-free.
If you’re determined to find it for free, Project Gutenberg or Open Library might be worth checking, though older works are more likely to be there. Otherwise, secondhand bookstores or university library archives could be goldmines. The thrill of hunting down a physical copy has its own charm, too!