
Undocumented
A Dominican Boy's Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2015
Lexile Score
930
Reading Level
4-6
نویسنده
Dan-el Padilla Peraltaشابک
9780698195684
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

June 8, 2015
In this dogged journey of a Dominican boy “without papers,” Peralta, currently a Mellon research fellow at Columbia University, describes his valiant battle against the obstacles of poverty, prejudice, and government red tape. Peralta, a native of Santo Domingo, came to America at age four with his undocumented parents, but financial demands forced his father to return home, leaving Peralta and his mother to fend for themselves. He writes candidly about hard times including a period spent in a dangerous homeless shelter, breaking through the harsh immigrant clichés to a pure humanistic level that any reader can embrace. Peralta found time to study despite the lack of financial stability; in time, he attended an elite Manhattan private school, then earned a degree from Princeton University. Understanding the “contradictions of his life,” he describes himself: “illegal alien, hoodrat, Dominican, classicist,” but states no one label could accurately fit him. Part memoir, part confessional, and part coming-of-age tale, Peralta’s story holds several truths on the road through loss, sacrifice, and achievement to gaining his slice of the American dream.

May 1, 2015
This story of the personal struggle of an undocumented alien underscores the need for comprehensive immigration reform. Being without papeles all his life growing up in New York City led Peralta to hide his impoverished Dominican roots-until Ivy League sponsors and even President Bill Clinton helped get him permission to travel abroad to Oxford and eventually change his immigrant status to allow him to attend graduate school at Stanford. For any other undocumented person, deportation loomed, while leaving the country meant being barred from re-entry, a fact the author is cognizant of as he embraces his great opportunity in America. Peralta's parents first brought him to America when he was 4, in 1989. Though they had solid office jobs in Santo Domingo, the parents sought better health care and schools but soon came up against the enormous cost of living in New York, where some of the family's aunts and uncles already lived. Peralta's father moved back, but his mother stayed, fiercely keeping the family going even when they had to live in a homeless shelter for a year. Still, the author was an avid reader, and he excelled in the New York public schools, catching the attention of an art teacher who became the boy's "big brother" and helped navigate Peralta's admission to an elite Upper West Side private school, Collegiate, where he mixed with mostly rich white kids and never let on to his true undocumented status. At this point in the narrative, the author slips into a street slang that he assumed with irony-a way of "fronting" to show how tough he had to be straddling two different worlds. Yet it's jarring, as he keeps it up through the narrative of his college years at Princeton and beyond. The author eventually became a scholar of classics, and the "whispering ghost of race/survivor guilt" still haunts. Occasionally uneven, but an impassioned and honest memoir from an author determined to prove himself worthy.
COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

May 15, 2015
Seeking medical care for a complicated pregnancy, Peralta's mother and father brought him with them to the U.S. from the Dominican Republic. Born in the U.S., his younger brother automatically had the documentation that Peralta and his mother lacked. When his father returned to the DR, Peralta and his mother struggled with poverty complicated by their status, finally settling in low-income housing in Harlem. A volunteer at the shelter library recognized Peralta's intelligence and helped him get a scholarship to Collegiate, the nation's oldest private school. Peralta spent his youth projecting two very different sides of himself, the tough exterior he showed to the neighborhood gang-bangers and the hunger for knowledge he displayed at school. Between a very protective mother and his own ambition, he succeeded despite the lack of documentation that limits his ability to work, to travel, and to get financial aid. At Princeton and at the top of his class, he revealed his undocumented status in a profile in the Wall Street Journal. Peralta offers an inspiring personal story of the hardships faced by undocumented families.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

May 15, 2015
This memoir follows Peralta from the time his mother brought him to the United States from the Dominican Republic as little more than a toddler, through his graduations from Princeton and Oxford Universities. Peralta (Columbia Univ. Humanities Fellow; Divine Institutions) tells his story in order to bring more attention to how the United States treats hardworking, intelligent, undocumented young people. To prove his point, he portrays himself as almost squeaky clean; along with modest, bookish, and willing to follow the rules. What drama there is here comes not from any inner struggle in Peralta but from his mother's difficulties to support her two children. The memoir gains momentum when the author is old enough to feel the consequences of being an undocumented American, as a college student often reminded of his outsider status. VERDICT Peralta's simple and unadorned yet fast-moving narrative provides an insightful read for anyone passionate about immigration reform; recommended for fans of Gabrielle Giffords and Mark Kelly's Gabby: A Story of Courage and Hope. [See Prepub Alert, 1/25/15.]--Jessica Spears, Monroe Coll. Lib., Bronx, NY
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

February 15, 2015
At age four, Padilla Peralta came to the United States legally with his family, but though his father returned home when their visas expired, his mother stayed on to secure better opportunities for her sons. The family ended up in a homeless shelter, where a volunteer noted Padilla Peralta's love of learning and arranged for him to attend Manhattan's prestigious Collegiate School. From there he went on to Princeton, graduating summa cum laude and giving the salutatorian's traditional commencement address in Latin. A few months previously, he bravely opted to out himself as an undocumented student in a Wall Street Journal profile. An important resource as the immigration reform debate heats up.
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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