Francisco CantúFrancisco Cantú is a writer, translator, and the author of The Line Becomes a River, winner of the 2018 Los Angeles Times Book Prize and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in nonfiction. A former Fulbright fellw, he has been the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, a Whiting Award, an Art for Justice fellowship, and the Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano Literature. His writing and translations have been featured in The New Yorker, The New York Review, Granta, Guernica, and VQR, as well as on This American Life. His work has also been widely anthologized, including in Best American Essays, Nepantla Familias, The Selena Reader, The Nature of Desert Nature, and Shadows of Reality: A Catalogue of W. G. Sebald's Photographic Materials. A lifelong resident of the Southwest, he now lives in Tucson where he is an assistant professor of creative writing at the University of Arizona and a co-coordinator of Field Studies in Writing Program and DETAINED, a community archive that collects oral histories of people who have been incarcerated in for-profit immigration detention centers. Read More Read Less
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