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Distributed for Acre Books

Bad Mexican, Bad American

Poems

This collection of poems by Jose Hernandez Diaz showcases the unique style that has made him a rising star in the poetry community.

In Bad Mexican, Bad American, the minimalist, working-class aesthetic of a “disadvantaged Brown kid” takes wing in prose poems that recall and celebrate that form’s ties to Surrealism. With influences like Alberto Ríos and Ray Gonzalez on one hand, and James Tate and Charles Baudelaire on the other, the collection spectacularly combines “high” art and folk art in a way that collapses those distinctions, as in the poem “My Date with Frida Kahlo”: “Frida and I had Cuban coffee and then vegetarian tacos. We sipped on mescal and black tea. At the end of the night, following an awkward silence during a conversation on Cubism, we kissed for about thirty minutes beneath a protest mural by David Alfaro Siqueiros.”

Bad Mexican, Bad American demonstrates how having roots in more than one culture can be both unsettling and rich: van Gogh and Beethoven share the page with tattoos, graffiti, and rancheras; Quetzalcoatl shows up at Panda Express; a Mexican American child who has never had a Mexican American teacher may become that teacher; a parent’s “broken” English is beautiful and masterful. Blending reality with dream and humility with hope, Hernandez Diaz contributes a singing strand to the complex cultural weave that is twenty-first-century poetry.

82 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Culture Studies

Latin American Studies

Poetry


View all books from Seagull Books

Reviews

“The publication of Jose Hernandez Diaz's first full collection of poems is cause for celebration. He is a gifted poet always ready to delight with outstanding song and poetry. Bad Mexican, Bad American is the best book I've read in a long time from a young poet who holds no punches. Hernandez Diaz’s inspiration comes from daily life, from family, from a rich cultural tradition that make every poem in this collection shine with great empathy and humanity. I love how much the poet respects the sacrifices his parents made. I hear the plight of a young artist moving the reader with powerful and well-crafted poems. I am proud to call Hernandez Diaz one of the best poets of his generation, and certainly a poet who walks daily with Lorca's Duende and we are given the gift of his very best in this collection.”

Virgil Suárez, author of “Amerikan Chernobyl” and “The Painted Bunting's Last Molt”

“In Jose Hernandez Diaz’s Bad Mexican, Bad American, the prose poem reigns, along with the jackal tattoo, the Rage Against the Machine t-shirt worn to a job interview, and graffiti painted by ‘first-gen guys from the neighborhood growing up like me, between cultures, between poverty and wealth,’ guys with names like Gato, like Chaos. The poems arise from the kingdom of the grand in-between, this ‘library of forgotten saints on the other side of heaven,’ this location of ‘broken languages’ that sound like a Neruda poem, like prayer, of ‘broken people’ who transform into surrealists, insomniacs, magicians, ghosts, and poets. These are poems of mystery and charm, in which a rooster tattoo on a shoulder in L.A. unfolds into a dream about a rooster in the family’s rancho back in Mexico—icon, dream, and memory in an everlasting blood tie—and ‘a man in a Chicano Batman shirt [rides] a lowrider bicycle on the ocean waves,’ neither Jesus nor demon, hologram nor myth, good Mexican nor good American, but like this exhilarative collection, a literal miracle.”

Diane Seuss, author of “frank: sonnets”

"Hernandez Diaz’s reflective debut engages with themes of identity and cultural hybridity, interrogating the concept of self-awareness against the perceptions of others. . . . Revealing how past experiences, dreams, and personal interactions shape one’s sense of self, these varied poems resonate."

Publishers Weekly

"Part memoir, part speculative, always imaginative and engrossing, Hernandez Diaz’s newest poetry collection traverses culture, identity, and time, all the while treating the reader to masterfully crafted free verse and prose poetry, encounters with long-since-passed artistic giants (such as Paz and Kahlo), and the merging of the ancient and the contemporary. . . . Bad Mexican, Bad American carves out an inclusive and validating space for not only Hernandez Diaz but all those who too often find themselves torn between the various and seemingly oppositional commitments of the cultures with which they identify and from which they may well trace their ancestry, but which they nonetheless and frequently struggle to claim."

The Adroit Journal

“Jose Hernandez Diaz has written a new place into existence. It is disorienting, jarring, fantastical, nonsensical, and mesmerizing. . . . I found myself immersed in a place where I could send my lover flowers from the grave, where I could talk to a man with a lizard head or Quetzalcoatl at Panda Express, or listen to a skeleton in a sombrero playing guitar. I was completely absorbed and loving my new surroundings. What a delight to read this collection, to experience this strange new voice. What a singular city Jose Hernandez Diaz has invited us to visit. This a rewarding and must-read debut.”

Rodney Gomez, author of "Arsenal with Praise Song"

Table of Contents

I

Ballad of the West Coast Mexican American/Chicanx 00
Doña Ofelia 00
Familia 00
Ode to the Overlooked Minimalist Painting in the Gallery 00
Roots That Cracked the Pavement 00
My Father Never Ate until Everyone Had Eaten 00
Broken 00
My Mother’s “Broken” English 00
The Pocha with the Adelita Tattoo 00
El Chacal 00
Folk Song 00
Bildungsroman of a Disadvantaged Brown Kid 00
I Never Had a Mexican American Teacher Growing Up 00
La Paleta 00
My Name 00
The Skeleton and the Pyramid 00
Bad Mexican, Bad American 00

II

The Magician 00
The Surrealist Café 00
The Recluse 00
Quetzalcoatl in the City 00
Insomniac Moon 00
The Golden Telescope 00
Mirage 00
No Internet 00
The Hummingbird Graffiti 00
Lizard Man 00
Wolverine on Hollywood Blvd. 00
My Life as a French Existential Novelist 00
The Road 00
Meeting Octavio Paz on the Planet Jupiter 00
My Date with Frida Kahlo 00
Meeting James Tate in Heaven 00

III

The Jaguar Tattoo 00
The Rooster Tattoo 00
The Showdown 00
The Void 00
The Anarchy 00
The Fair 00
El Melancólico 00
The Pirate Ship 00
The Fall 00
The Ollie 00
Ode to a California Neck Tattoo 00
Sunday Cruise 00
Tuesday 00
The Conformist 00
The Rebel 00
The Stranger 00

IV

Voice 00
The Moon 00
The Gargoyle 00
The Advertisements 00
The First Day of Autumn 00
The West 00
The Blue Hummingbird 00
The Ocean Is Not a Capitalist 00
The Surfer and the Jaguar 00
The End of a Decade 00
Bones 00
Ghost 00
At the Funeral for van Gogh’s Ear 00
At the Cemetery of Dead Poets 00

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