Award-winning writer Michael Nava signs copies of and reads from his latest novel, CITY OF PALACES. Introduction by Rigoberto Gonzalez. This event is co-sponsored by the Queer Latino/Latina Writers Collective.
Please note: The Bureau is closed on Tuesdays, but we will open at 5:30 pm for this event, which begins at 6:30.
Michael Nava, a third-generation Californian of Mexican descent, and the grandson of immigrants, was born in Sacramento. He was the first person in his family to attend colle...
Award-winning writer Michael Nava signs copies of and reads from his latest novel, CITY OF PALACES. Introduction by Rigoberto Gonzalez. This event is co-sponsored by the Queer Latino/Latina Writers Collective.
Please note: The Bureau is closed on Tuesdays, but we will open at 5:30 pm for this event, which begins at 6:30.
Michael Nava, a third-generation Californian of Mexican descent, and the grandson of immigrants, was born in Sacramento. He was the first person in his family to attend college, graduating with a B.A. in history from the Colorado College. He later received his law degree from Stanford University.
He began writing when he was 12 years old, around the same time he recognized that he was gay. In his autobiographical essay Gardenland, a memoir of his childhood in the working-class Mexican neighborhood of the same name, he says he turned to writing because he was filled with words he was otherwise unable to express
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He began writing what became his first novel as a third year law student at Stanford. The Little Death, was published in 1986 by Alyson Publications, a small gay press that accepted the book after 12 other publishers had rejected it. The Little Death introduced readers to Henry Rios, a gay, Latino criminal defense lawyer based primarily in Los Angeles.
Six further Rios novels followed β Goldenboy (1988), Howtown (1990), The Hidden Law (1992), The Death of Friends (1994), The Burning Plain (1996), and Rag and Bone (2000). The books were awarded a total of six Lambda Literary Awards and in 2000 Nava was given the Bill Whitehead Award for Lifetime Achievement in gay and lesbian literature. With Rage and Bone, Nava announced the end of his career as a mystery writer.
Beginning in 1995, Nava started researching a novel about the life of silent film star Ramon Novarro who as gay and Mexican. At the same time, he became interested in the Yaquis, an Indian tribe that inhabited the northwest state of Sonora along the border with Arizona.
Eventually, these interests converged and he began to write a novel that would tell the story of the Mexican Revolution, the near-genocide of the Yaquis, and the rise of silent film. Midway through his first draft, he recognized that this undertaking was too vast for a single book, so he conceived a series of novels called The Children of Eve, after the line in the Salve Regina addressed to Mary, the mother of Jesus: βTo thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve.β The first novel in that series is The City of Palaces, which is set in Mexico City in the years before and at the beginning of the 1910 Mexican Revolution.
In addition to his novels, Nava has had a distinguished career as an appellate lawyer working primarily in the California court system including the California Supreme Court. As a lawyer, he has been a tireless advocate for greater diversity in the legal profession.
A fuller biography of Michael Nava is available on Wikipedia. See also profile on glbtq.com.