Dagoberto Gilb
Encyclopedia
Dagoberto Gilb is an American writer born in Los Angeles, California, whose reputation, after years between L.A. and Texas, is as one of the leading voices from the American Southwest.

Gilb was born in Los Angeles. He attended the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he earned both bachelor's and master's degrees. Gilb embarked on a career in construction, became a journeyman carpenter, and joined the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners in Los Angeles.

Background

Gilb was born to a mother from Mexico who came across the border illegally, while his father was born in Kentucky. Both, however, were raised in Los Angeles from a young age, his mother in downtown L.A., his father in Boyle Heights, where he learned Spanish. The two divorced when he was very young, and he was raised by his mother. His father worked for 49 years in an industrial laundry, where he became the floor supervisor. His mother was a model in her early years, then became a dental assistant, until she remarried two more times.http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2000/03/13/2000_03_13_042_TNY_LIBRY_000020389

Gilb began working at thirteen as a sheet shaker, then found jobs as a janitor and a factory shipping clerk. After high school, he went to several community colleges, working full-time as a paper cutter and as a stockboy in a major department store. He finally transferred to the University of California, Santa Barbara
University of California, Santa Barbara
The University of California, Santa Barbara, commonly known as UCSB or UC Santa Barbara, is a public research university and one of the 10 general campuses of the University of California system. The main campus is located on a site in Goleta, California, from Santa Barbara and northwest of Los...

. He graduated in 1974 with a double major in Philosophy and Religious Studies, remaining there until he also received M.A. in Religious Studies in 1976.

From 1976-79 Gilb worked in many areas of the construction trades to make his living, as a laborer, stonemason, and carpenter. A new father, by 1979 he had joined the United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners, and he worked as a journeyman until 1992. Though he did all facets of carpentry work, his main employment was as class-A high-rise.

Writing career

In 1977, while completing a never-published novel, Gilb was working on a three-story addition to the museum at the University of Texas at El Paso
University of Texas at El Paso
The University of Texas at El Paso is a four-year state university, and is a component institution of the University of Texas System. Its campus is located on the bank of the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas. The school was founded in 1914 as The Texas State School of Mines and Metallurgy,...

 when he learned of the writer Raymond Carver
Raymond Carver
Raymond Clevie Carver, Jr. was an American short story writer and poet. Carver is considered a major American writer of the late 20th century and also a major force in the revitalization of the short story in the 1980s....

, who was teaching across the campus street and was only at the beginning of his national acclaim. Because of Carver's prominence, Gilb turned to short stories, and he began publishing in 1982. The first bound work of his own was a chapbook-sized collection, Winners on the Pass Line (1985), also the first by El Paso's Cinco Puntos Press. His first full book of stories (35 had been published in magazines by then) was The Magic of Blood (1993), with the University of New Mexico Press
University of New Mexico Press
The University of New Mexico Press, founded in 1929, is a university press that is part of the University of New Mexico. Its administrative offices are in the Office of Research , on the campus of UNM in Albuquerque....

. The stories are populated by working men, Mexican American, who live in the Southwest. It won the 1994 PEN/Hemingway Foundation Award, the Jesse Jones Texas Institute of Letters Award, and was a PEN Faulkner finalist.

More books followed, all published in New York by Grove Press
Grove Press
Grove Press is an American publishing imprint that was founded in 1951. Imprints include: Black Cat, Evergreen, Venus Library, Zebra. Barney Rosset purchased the company in 1951 and turned it into an alternative book press in the United States. The Atlantic Monthly Press, under the aegis of its...

: a novel, The Last Known Residence of Mickey Acuña (1994), about a drifter living at a financial border as a resident of a YMCA on the El Paso border; a collection of short fiction, Woodcuts of Women (2001), stories of men obsessed with women; a collection of nonfiction essays, Gritos (2003), a finalist for the National Book Critics' Circle Award, collecting Gilb's nonfiction essays as a construction worker, a writer, a teacher, and a parent; an anthology, Hecho en Tejas (2006), winner of the PEN Southwest Book Award, now the canonical work of record for Mexican American literature in Texas; and the novel The Flowers (2008), an urban survival tale of a Chicano becoming a man in a city on the verge of a white-and-black race riot. Before the End, After the Beginning (2011) is his latest collection of short fiction. As an after effect of a stroke Gilb suffered in 2009, the book is a meditation on the transitory, on impermanence, on "unseen" people, themes and characaters Gilb has always dwelled on, now heightened

In Gritos, the collection of mostly autobiographical essays, Gilb locates both his place and his work in American letters, and by doing so, claims space for Chicanos in American life and culture. Gilb labels his narrative approach “first-person stupid,” but critics praise its candor, depth, and clarity (despite or maybe because of the author’s rejection of heavy-handed commentary). The essays are parable-like: “fool stories” that express learned wisdom.

Gilb has also worked on a few movies and documentaries and spent several years writing commentaries which aired on the NPR show Fresh Air
Fresh Air
Fresh Air is an American radio talk show broadcast on National Public Radio stations across the United States. The show is produced by WHYY-FM in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Its longtime host is Terry Gross. , the show was syndicated to 450 stations and claimed 4.5 million listeners. The show...

. In 1997, he accepted a job teaching in the MFA program at Southwest Texas State University, now Texas State University. In September 2009, Gilb joined the faculty of the University of Houston–Victoria
University of Houston–Victoria
The University of Houston–Victoria is a four-year state university, and is a component institution of the University of Houston System. Its campus spans 20-acre in Victoria, with satellite locations at UH System centers in Sugar Land and Cinco Ranch...

 as a Writer-in-Residence and Executive Director of Centro Victoria: Center for Mexican American Literature and Culture.

Awards

  • James D. Phelan Award, San Francisco Foundation, 1984
  • Dobie-Paisano Fellowship, Texas Institute of Letters, 1987
  • National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, 1992
  • Whiting Writers' Award, 1993
  • PEN/Hemingway Award, 1994
  • PEN Faulkner Award, finalist, 1994
  • El Paso Writers' Hall of Fame, 1995
  • Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, 1995
  • National Book Critics Circle Award, finalist, 2003
  • Texas Book Festival Bookend Award, 2007
  • PEN Southwest Book Award, 2008

Books

  • Winners on the Pass Line and Other Stories, 1985
  • The Magic of Blood
    The Magic of Blood
    The Magic of Blood is a short story collection by Dagoberto Gilb. It received the 1994 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award and the 1993 Whiting Writers' Award. The collection was released to rave reviews by several reputable critics, as well as authors, for its brutal realism and genuine portrayal of...

    , 1993
  • The Last Known Residence of Mickey Acuña, 1994
  • Woodcuts of Women, 2001
  • Gritos, 2003
  • Hecho en Tejas: An Anthology of Texas Mexican Literature, 2006
  • The Flowers, 2008
  • Before the End, After the Beginning, 2011

Selected works

  • "Down in the West Texas Town", Puerto del Sol, Spring 1982
  • "Where the Sun Don't Shine", The Threepenny Review, Fall 1983
  • "Look on the Bright Side", The Pushcart Prize XVII: Best of the Small Presses, 1992
  • "Poverty Is Always Starting Over", Fresh Air, July 26, 1994
  • "María de Covina", The New Yorker, September 29, 1997
  • "Northeast Direct", The Best American Essays 1997
  • "Victoria", The Best American Essays 1999,
  • "I Knew She Was Beautiful", The New Yorker, March 13, 2000
  • "Work Is Good" Carpenter, September/October 2000
  • "Romero's Shirt", Still Wild, 2000
  • "Pride", The Texas Observer, May 24, 2001
  • "Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes", Harper's Magazine, June 2001
  • "Documenting the Undocumented", The Los Angeles Times, July 5, 2001
  • "About Tere Who Was in Palomas", Pushcart Prize Stories XXVI: Best of the Small Presses, 2001
  • "Sentimental for Steinbeck", The New York Times, March 18, 2002
  • "Spanish Guy", The New Yorker, April 22 & 29, 2002
  • "You Know Him by His Labors", The Los Angeles Times, January 14, 2004
  • "Willows Village", Harper's Magazine, September 2008
  • "please, thank you", Harper's Magazine, June 2010
  • "Uncle Rock", The PEN/O'Henry Prize Stories, 2012
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