books

THE ALIGNIST Takes The Stage In Our First Live Event

THE ALIGNIST brought the multisensory literary journey contained in each box to the stage in a live event featuring a variety of performers as well as panel discussions at The Greene Space in New York City. The cultural showcase sought to “unpack” key themes from its COLOMBIA Box through a representation of the arts, culture, politics, and society of that country. 

The evening opened with an improvisational performance by Pablo Mayor, a musician and composer, along with Daniel Fetecua, a dancer and composer. 

For Fetecua, the moment was one of openness that guides him as a dancer, even when representing challenging issues.

“I did a piece based on the Bojayá massacre in which the country’s leftist FARC militants killed nearly 100 people, making the 2002 episode the single most deadly attack on civilians in the course of more than half a century of armed conflict,” he told the audience of about 100 people. “I was in Colombia but I felt like an outsider [in that indigenous community].” 

Mayor too says his art opened him to new communities. He was still a student when he first began to perform publicly.

“I started to play for a lot of mafia people, doing gigs from first communions to birthday parties,” he explained. “And when I came to the United States it was shocking to hear people say, ‘You got some? Give me some!’ And you start to hear the joke and it starts to get old.” 

Both men now strive to strike a balance between representing the challenges their country has faced and celebrating its rich culture. 

“My focus has always been to work with the rhythms and the music from Columbia and presenting a new version of it,” Mayor said. “Something that is more contemporary.” 

Sharing such stories across cultures requires special care, according to Germán Jaramillo, who played former Colombian Attorney General Gustavo De Greiff on the Netflix series Narcos. He said representing such a looming figure from the history of his country to a foreign audience felt like a huge responsibility. 

He met with Greiff, who took issue with the heavy-handed nature of the U.S.-led War on Drugs. 

Maria McFarland Sanchez-Moreno, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, offered context to the early years of that effort. 

“Colombia, even before the drug war that involved Escobar, had its own internal armed conflict involving left wing guerillas, right wing paramilitary, the military, which the U.S. was interested in, and where the U.S. was siding with the government against the guerillas.” 

The author of There Are No Dead Here: A Story of Murder and Denial in Colombia, she spent years investigating the impact of the conflict, and its root in combatting the production and sale of illicit drugs. 

“When you started seeing cocaine being imported into the U.S. from Colombia in the 70s and 80s, that coincided with a domestic effort in the United States to really crack down on certain groups that were viewed as undesirable, specifically: black people and hippies according to Nixon’s aides,” Sanchez-Moreno told the audience. “It’s been well documented that the War on Drugs which Nixon started and which Reagan ramped up -- and which we’re still living with today -- was driven by that motivation.” 

The Sound of Things Falling, by Juan Gabriel Vasquez, set those early days of the War on Drugs into motion. The book was the featured novel in Summer 2019 edition of THE ALIGNIST and Vasquez offered short reading from it. Although the work references myriad moments and individuals from Colombian history, Vasquez said he searched for something beyond the facts and figures in writing the novel. 

“I grew up as a Colombian with this wealth of information of the drug wars and with pictures such as of the images of the bombed planes and the bombed planes, and with statistics of the number of deaths, and even with videos of Luis Carlos Galán being getting shot and killed during a rally in Colombia,” he said. “So I have this information about the visible side of the drug trade, what about the invisible side?”

“To write a novel only to say what you can find in newspapers, or in great journalism. Novels should try to tell you something else, the other side, the invisible side, the hidden side of reality. This is what I try to do with my books.” 

And in doing so, he has shown that truth can often be stranger than fiction, and fiction more telling than the truth we’re able to glean about our world. 


THESE 3 NOVELS DETAIL THE PAIN OF SEPARATION FOR MIGRANT FAMILIES

Never before have so many people fled their homes. According to the United Nations, the number has reached 68.5 million, with only about 100,000 of them resettled. Millions have left behind war, violence, and famine only to face new challenges: children separated from their parents in the United States, extended stays in squalid camps in Greece, and migrant ships turned back by Italian officials. These three writers account for the difficult decisions and hard realities families face when they gamble everything they know to search for something better.

 

Inspired by the story of an undocumented Guatemalan woman whose 5-year-old son was adopted away from her by an American couple in Missouri, writer Shanthi Sekaran follows two immigrant mothers in her novel Lucky Boy. One crossed the U.S.-Mexico border without papers, the other followed her husband to Silicon Valley from India. Their stories cross around one “lucky boy.”

In Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits, writer Laila Lalami follows four people who, like many thousands in recent years, risk their lives on a rubber dinghy on the Mediterranean in hopes of a new life in Europe. They each have their own reasons for craving an escape -- abusive marriages to demeaning work to troubled children -- and each are driven by hope for a life that will be better, just as soon as it isn’t so foreboding.

 

Writer Jenny Erpenbeck captures the diversity of migrants streaming into Germany in her Go, Went, Gone. The book follows a retired academic, Richard, who happens upon a group of migrants camping out in a park only to make their lives the focus of a new study that is as much about the individual men he encounters as it is about the treatment of the “other” in Western Europe. Erpenbeck makes clear in this work that resilience is no one’s first reason for living.

FIVE NOVELS THAT HELPED MAKE SENSE OF THE WORLD IN 2015

FIVE NOVELS THAT HELPED MAKE SENSE OF THE WORLD IN 2015

2015 saw more than a million migrants land on the shores of Europe, the launch of a reconfigured campaign against terror, a shocking array of mass killings, and far more. Here are five books which shed light on some of those events and more. 

FIVE BOOKS TO REMIND YOU WHY NOTHING IS SIMPLE IN PARIS

FIVE BOOKS TO REMIND YOU WHY NOTHING IS SIMPLE IN PARIS

“Paris was a very old city and we were young and nothing was simple there, not even poverty, nor sudden money, nor the moonlight, nor right and wrong nor the breathing of someone who lay beside you in the moonlight," Hemingway wrote in A Moveable Feast