Growing up on his parents' ranch in North San Diego County, Victor
Villaseñor's teenage years were marked by a painful quest to find a
place for himself in a world he did not fit into. Discriminated due to
his Mexican heritage, Victor questions the tenets of his faith and the
restrictions it places on his own spirituality and sexuality.
Ultimately, his search for identity takes him to Mexico to learn of his
family's roots, where he soon discovers that his heritage doesn't
determine his intelligence or success. Through this often humorous and
poignant tale, Victor deftly undermines the macho stereotype so often
associated with Latinos, while exposing the tender vulnerability and
naïveté of a young man grappling with the roles foisted on him by the
church and society. Victor's youthful misadventures elicit sympathy,
laughter, and tears as he attempts to divine the mysteries of the
opposite sex in this powerful, revealing memoir. "The clarity that comes
from Villaseñor's personal and cultural experience is not matched in any
of Steinbeck's major works" (Los Angeles Times).