Standing at the podium, Victor Villaseñor looked at the group of
educators amassed before him, and his mind flooded with childhood
memories of humiliation and abuse at the hands of his teachers. He
became enraged. With a pounding heart, he began to speak of these
incidents. When he was through, to his great disbelief he received a
standing ovation. Many in the audience could not contain their own
tears.
So begins the passionate, touching memoir of Victor Villaseñor. Highly
gifted and imaginative as a child, Villaseñor coped with an untreated
learning disability (he was finally diagnosed, at the age of forty-four,
with extreme dyslexia) and the frustration of growing up Latino in an
English-only American school in the 1940s. Despite teachers who beat him
because he could not speak English, Villaseñor clung to his dream of one
day becoming a writer. He is now considered one of the premier writers
of our time.