The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Writer’s first young adult romance has political echoes

Literature ‘great way’ to get youth talking about broader issues.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

We’ve all met someone like Evan, an over-privileged prepster and one of the heroes of “Dream Things True” by Decatur writer Marie Marquardt.

Less well-known is Alma, the novel’s ambitious Latina whose plans for college are derailed when her family is deported.

Go to myAJC.com/dbf for our complete coverage of the AJC Decatur Book Festival, including an interview with keynote speaker Erica Jong.

The star-crossed romance between the two Georgia teen- agers provides the heart of Marquardt’s young adult tale. It’s her first novel, but not the first time she’s written about the immigrant community.

A scholar in residence at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology, Marquardt earned a doctorate in the sociology of religion while visiting the churches of Georgia’s Mexican immigrants. At the same time, she became an advocate for the families of the undocument­ed.

She is co-author of the nonfiction work “Living Illegal: the Human Face of Unauthoriz­ed Immigratio­n” and cofounder of El Refugio, a hos- pitality house for families of the inmates at the Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, where more than a thousand immigrants are incarcerat­ed.

Marquardt, 43, will speak about the story 1-1:45 p.m. Sunday on the Teen Stage at the AJC Decatur Book Festival.

She recently discussed how her life has informed her fiction.

About the “real” Alma:

She was a composite of many of the kids I have come to know over the years. Every piece of the story that has an immigrant element to it is true. All the things that happened to Alma and her fami- ly are things that happened to people I was doing research with.

About toning down the sexy parts of the book (and, in the end, advocating chastity) when you have four children in the house, ages 5, 10, 11 and 14:

When you have people in your household reading it, it makes you very thoughtful about what messages you’re communicat­ing. ... I want to highlight how intense the moment is when you’re seeing the girl you’re attracted to, and (write about) not jumping

right into the next thing.

About combining social commentary and young-adult romance:

Talking to them through literature is a great way to get young adults talking about broader issues. I don’t want to tell them what to think about policy questions, but I think it’s important for them to know what’s happening in their own communitie­s.

About the climate of the current debate on immigratio­n:

Over the course of the past seven years, we’ve seen a big change in public perception of undocument­ed immigrants. Most Americans, state by state, want to see some sort of federal immigratio­n reform.

On being a member of We Need Diverse Books, an organizati­on dedicated to bringing a wider variety of subject matter and communitie­s into children’s literature.

A quarter of American high school students are Latina or Latino. That’s not reflected in our books. ... I wrote this story because I wanted to write a really human sto- ry about a group of kids that I don’t think our literature is paying enough attention to.

On reaction from the Latino community:

One reader said, “Seeing the stories of my own family and my own community be recognized in a novel like this was almost like being recognized by the universe itself.”

 ??  ?? Marie Marquardt used experience­s working with immigrant communitie­s to inform her new young adult novel, “Dream Things True.”
Marie Marquardt used experience­s working with immigrant communitie­s to inform her new young adult novel, “Dream Things True.”

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