El Coyote, the Rebel: A Nonfiction Novel

$12.95

by Luis Pérez

ISBN: 978-1-55885-296-9
Publication Date: April 30, 2000
Bind: Trade Paperback
Pages: 198

Vividly depicts a young boy’s involvement in the Mexican Revolution.

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A soldier at the age of eleven. An honorably discharged veteran at the age of thirteen. A miner, a cotton-picker, a shepherd, and a graduate of Hollywood High. Luis Pérez lived an incredible life and then shaped his story into a vividly realized autobiographical novel.

El Coyote, the Rebel, originally published in 1947, tells how the toddler Luis, son of an Aztec mother and a French diplomat father, ended up in the care of an uncle who soon drank away most of the boy’s inheritance. Having run away from cruel treatment, Luis by chance came to fight with the rebel armies in the 1910 Mexican Revolution, received the nickname of “El Coyote” for his cunning, and was wounded in combat. Upon being given a discharge and a twenty-dollar bill, he walked across the border to become an American. His story concludes—after an episode of amorous misadventures in a missionary school—with the young hero preparing to marry his true love and solemnly taking the oath of U. S. citizenship, at “the beginning of a new tomorrow.”

 

“Amiable… Related with a beguiling simplicity and gentleness… El Coyote has much charm in a minor key… It reads like a dream.”—The New York Herald-Tribune

“Mr. Pérez gets down more of the meaninglessness, the waste, and the melancholy charm of life in [combat] than half-a-dozen historians… The whole nostalgic maladjustment of the American-born Mexican is brought out in the last pages of the book with remarkable economy and absolute ease.”—The New York Times Book Review

“Mr. Pérez writes simply and with a wealth of humor and good feeling.”—The San Francisco Chronicle

LUIS PÉREZ became a U.S. citizen in 1930 and served with honor in the U.S. War Service Office of Censorship during World War II. Afterwards, while working as a private Spanish tutor, he achieved a life-long goal by completing his often-interrupted formal education with a bachelors degree from Los Angeles State College in 1956. Luis Pérez died in 1962.