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Hunting Season

Immigration and Murder in an All-American Town

ebook
5 of 5 copies available
5 of 5 copies available

Ojito has done truth an invaluable service. Extraordinary.”—Junot Díaz, author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
 
2014 International Latino Awards Finalist
 
A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist uncovers the true story of an immigrant's murder that turned a quaint village on the Long Island shore into ground zero in the war on immigration
 
In November 2008, 37-year-old Marcelo Lucero, an unassuming worker at a dry cleaner’s and an undocumented Ecuadorean immigrant, was attacked and murdered by a group of teenagers as he walked the streets of the Long Island village of Patchogue accompanied by a childhood friend. The attackers were out “hunting for beaners.” Some of the kids later confessed that chasing, harassing, and assaulting defenseless “beaners”—their slur for Latinos—was part of their weekly entertainment. In recent years, Latinos have become the target of hate crimes as the nation wrestles with swelling numbers of undocumented immigrants. Public figures fan the flames and advance their careers by spewing anti-immigration rhetoric.
In death, Lucero became a symbol of everything that was wrong with our broken immigration system: fewer opportunities to obtain travel visas to the United States, porous borders, a growing dependency on cheap labor, and the rise of bigotry.
 
Drawing on firsthand interviews and on-the-ground reporting, journalist Mirta Ojito has crafted an unflinching portrait of one community struggling to reconcile the hate and fear underlying the idyllic veneer of their all-American town. With a strong commitment to telling all sides of the story, Ojito unravels the engrossing narrative with objectivity and insight, providing an invaluable look at one of America’s most pressing issues.
 
“Reminds us how we might think of each other and how we treat all of our neighbors, whether or not they look like us. This is our human story.”—Wes Moore, author of The Other Wes Moore

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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2013
      A disturbing account of how attacks on Latino immigrants became a teenage sport in one suburban town, whose bigotry is seen here as typical of much of America. Ojito (Journalism/Columbia Univ.; Finding Manana: A Memoir of a Cuban Exodus, 2005), who was part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for reporting on race in America while at the New York Times, takes an in-depth look at the entwined issues of racism and anti-immigration sentiment. Where once new immigrants headed for large cities, now the destination is often suburbia. In this account, it was an influx of Ecuadorians to Patchogue, N.Y., that aroused hatred to the point of mayhem and manslaughter. The author tells her story through key players in the drama, among them Marcelo Lucero, an Ecuadorian who was stabbed to death; Angel Loja, his companion, who was also attacked; Julio Espinoza, the "pioneer" Ecuadorian emigrant to the town; the librarian who started an outreach program to the town's Spanish-speaking immigrants; and Jeff Conroy, the teenager stabber, and his six buddies who, on a November night in 2008, were out "hunting for beaners," as they called their search for Latinos. In the background are politicians, TV pundits, lawyers, police officers, ministers and, importantly, parents. As Ojito reports, the message that many young people in Patchogue receive over the dinner table is that immigrants are despicable pests and that hunting them down meets with parental approval. The author lets participants tell their own stories, and their words reveal much about their attitudes. Conroy, who received a long sentence, was surprisingly willing to talk to the author, and his father and several Ecuadorian parents are well-portrayed in the later chapters. A dark reminder that anti-immigrant sentiment has a long history in this country and that the immigration issue is not going away any time soon.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2013

      The primary victim in the 2008 tragedy described in this book was an undocumented Ecuadorean immigrant man who was attacked by a group of Long Island youths, but the act rocked a community and transformed a fairly average teenage boy into a convicted killer. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ojito (Finding Manana: A Memoir of a Cuban Exodus), who was a Mariel boatlift immigrant, expertly conveys the details of the crime, the international background of the victim and perpetrators, and the case's legal outcome and sentencing. Data sources include interviews, written works, and legal transcripts concerning the case. While this is basically a case study of murder in a generally safe and wealthy but highly segregated New York county, the narrative contains multiple complex themes involving immigration, bigotry transmitted generationally, hate crimes, and juvenile mayhem. Well documented, objective, and very readable, this title sends a powerful message about the need for tolerance, respect, and openness as public virtues and the important role that civic leaders and even libraries can play in fostering these values. VERDICT A vivid, journalistic account that will mostly appeal to those with a serious interest in immigration issues rather than to casual true crime readers. [Note: The events of this book were also the subject of the recent documentary Not in Our Town.--Ed.]--Antoinette Brinkman, formerly with Southwest Indiana Mental Health Ctr. Lib., Evansville

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2013
      Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist Ojito achieves another award-worthy feat, this time for her treatment of the minefield issue of immigration. Her focus is on a tragic 2008 incident in which a group of teenage Long Island boys intended only to harass an illegal Ecuadoran immigrant. But the encounter resulted, instead, in the man's death. After conducting extensive research and listening painstakingly to everyone involved who was willing to speak to her, Ojito then writes with such clarity and evenhandedness that this could be about an emotionally neutral topicsay, apple pie. Yet even as she maintains a dispassionate though not unfeeling distance while relating everyone's points of view, she does tie everything to the overarching concerns that shape each of the boys and their lives. The fact is, they have families who care about them and who tried to raise them to be decent people. And the deceased, Marcelo Lucero, also had a loving family and his own plans for the future. In Ojito's hands, the aggregate effect of their stories is one that is far more profound than the diatribes of pundits on both sides of the complex, deeply human question of immigration reform.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:1150
  • Text Difficulty:8-9

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