Hawke's Bay Today

Bilingual HOOT

Unlikely pair combine to produce a children’s book about an owl who longs to read

-

The 81-year-old author is often called a dean of Chicano literature. The illustrato­r is a younger muralist steeped in the visual traditions of Mexican-American pop culture and low-rider cars.

Together, novelist Rudolfo Anaya and painter Moises Salcedo — who goes by El Moises — have created a bilingual children’s book with parallel texts in Spanish and English about the adventures of a tiny owl named Ollie who longs to read on his own, even as he skips school and tangles with a cast of conniving animal characters in the hills and skies of northern New Mexico.

Anaya achieved lasting literary fame with the novel Bless Me, Ultima in 1972 about a boy’s coming of age in post-World War II New Mexico under the guidance of a traditiona­l spiritual healer. The book became a movie — and recently an opera.

The new children’s book from the Museum of New Mexico Press — titled Owl in a Straw Hat ,or El Tecolote del Sombrero de Paja —is chock-full of references to northern New Mexico geography and homespun Hispanic tradition — from posole soup and pinon nuts to the ‘acequia’ organisati­ons that help irrigate fields and lend a special order to local rural life.

Anaya said the work is a heartfelt effort to encourage shared family reading in English or Spanish, with eye-grabbing imagery.

The book’s illustrati­ons spring from the brush of Mexican-born, Arizona-raised El Moises — who made New Mexico his adopted home nearly a decade ago. His other recent commission­s include urban murals, a tequila logo, CD covers and more.

The 45-year-old illustrato­r is a father of five who often paints at a weathered living-room table amid the bustle of family. El Moises says people call him a Chicano artist, but it’s really just his take on everyday life.

“Bold and bright has always been my thing,” he said. “I love low-riders because I grew up around them. . . . I just think that I’m an artist who is narrating his life.”

One of the new book’s characters — a hungry and untrustwor­thy wolf in sunglasses named Luis Lobo — is adapted from a selfdesign­ed tattoo on the artist’s upper arm. Other characters include a young raven and crow who prefer video games to school. There are positive role models, too — a discipline­d roadrunner who drives a dazzling low-rider car and a loving grandmothe­r “Nana” owl.

El Moises and Anaya are already working on a sequel that explores concerns about childhood bullying — something the illustrato­r and a 13-year-old son have been grappling with recently in Albuquerqu­e, culminatin­g in the decision to do home schooling.

Anaya, a widower who lives in Albuquerqu­e with a dachshund at his side, continues to work steadily on essays and novels for grown-up readers.

He said Owl in a Straw Hat is an outgrowth of his enduring concern for children — including children living far away in war-torn countries.

“Maybe that’s why I write books for children, to get a lift, to think there is something positive on Earth that might offset the evil that we see,” Anaya said, on a day where violence in Syria dominated news headlines. “As I’m writing, I’m speaking to a child, to children. I’m kind of telling them, ‘Look at Oli and Raven and Crow’.”

The English text of the book contains a smattering of colloquial Spanish words and phrases — such as “mi’jito” for my little son. A Spanish-English glossary at the back resolves any mysteries.

"Bold and bright has always been my thing. I love low-riders because I grew up around them. . . . I just think that I’m an artist who is narrating his life."

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Moises Salcedo shows an early rendition of the lead character for the bilingual children's book Owl in a Straw Hat at his home and studio in Albuquerqu­e.
AP PHOTO Moises Salcedo shows an early rendition of the lead character for the bilingual children's book Owl in a Straw Hat at his home and studio in Albuquerqu­e.
 ?? PHOTO / AP ?? Illustrato­r Moises Salcedo, who goes by the name El Moises, shows a panel of characters for the bilingual children’s book Owl in a Straw Hat in his hometown of Albuquerqu­e.
PHOTO / AP Illustrato­r Moises Salcedo, who goes by the name El Moises, shows a panel of characters for the bilingual children’s book Owl in a Straw Hat in his hometown of Albuquerqu­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand