Saturday, April 17, 2010

Rude radar

That Rebel Girl—aka Lisa Alvarez—is a retiring soul. She’s shy and quiet, unassuming. She's not someone who seeks the limelight.

Still, manifest facts collect around her. The Reb is plainly a mover and shaker. Over the years, she’s occasionally held central roles in trustee campaigns, and she's had her fair share of leadership roles within her School. As a writing instructor, she’s made a big—sometimes, a huge—difference in the lives of many of her students, the continual evidence of which I experience first-hand as her friend and office mate.

She is, you know, the radical conscience of the fitfully pestiferous Dissent the Blog

But the world is bigger than SOCCCD politics. The Reb produces "The Mark on the Wall," the best literary blog in Orange County. And, as many of you know, she has long been associated with the prestigious Community of Writers at Squaw Valley, where, along with novelist Louis B. Jones, she directs the Writers Workshops.

But there's much more. Together with National Public Radio’s Alan Cheuse, she edited the well-received Writers Workshop in a Book: The Squaw Valley Community of Writers on the Art of Fiction.

Her own work has appeared in many publications—and in several noteworthy anthologies, including Norton’s hot new Sudden Fiction Latino: Short-Short Stories from the United States and Latin America, which has received terrific reviews (see), and seems destined to make a lasting splash in the literary/academic pond.

Owing to the latter, she was invited to the annual conference of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) in Denver, Colorado. By all accounts, the Sudden Fiction Latino session was a blazing success.

Naturally, she's been invited to speak in various other forums. Not for the first time, she's in demand.

So, why am I blowing Rebel Girl’s horn?

Because, it appears, the college refuses to.

This has long been the case, I believe. Naturally, some who deserve to be celebrated at Irvine Valley College are celebrated, and that's great. I don't want to take anything away from them. Still, often, the college's rude radar fails to detect prominent corsairs on the academic horizon. The pattern is a curious one.

So, a few days ago, I contacted the relevant person and informed her of some of the above Rebellious factoids. She responded immediately and positively, eager to correct the oversight. Good!

Then Wednesday passed. Then Thursday. Then Friday.

Nothing.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

First, aw. Second, you know how many of us keep secret the deaths in our families, rather than endure the meaningless "condolences" email? There may be nothing that can finally ease the slight you feel from your own academic home, but I am sorry that this shallow place is what it is.

Anonymous said...

It seems that they're "real" books too - from "real" publishers. Good credits is my point, not marginal ones.

Anonymous said...

Yes but these things are negatives not positives in many places and especially if they come from a woman, a minority, and especially a Hispanic person who does not evince slavish loyalty to the administration. One would think that extreme achievement would make the person powerful against the administration, but that isn't always so even with achievement yet more extreme than this. I'd like to think they're just jealous but probably they view these activities as suspect! (Yes, I am cynical, and angry, and resigned.)

Anonymous said...

Lisa and Roy are Dissent. That's what this is about. These people don't like to be criticized or scrutinized, even when those who are doing the criticizing are thoughtful.

Anonymous said...

I'm sure they'll get around to it. There's been so many other achievements to celebrate in hourly emails.

Anonymous said...

oh, give them time. People get busy. It's nice that you support your office mate -- and I bet they'll send out thr usual clap-trap in the next few days.

Anonymous said...

You can't expect the administration to give accolades to one of its staunchest critics? That would be wrong. We're not talking people of big integrity here. Plus there's no real photo-op, no trophy or plaque. You expect them to respect books? They don't even read them. Where do you think they work? A college or something?

Anonymous said...

Seems to me that the college could use this as a way of reaching out to the Latino community as well as the larger community - look, we have somemone special teaching here. (I know we're ALL special, but you know what I mean.)

Anonymous said...

Profacero points out soemthing I thought but didn't want to mention: it certainly helps around here if you're a white male who loves to old boys' club.

Anonymous said...

OR a certain kind of woman who loves the old white boys.

Anonymous said...

I've heard Glenn's been out sick. Probably not a conspiracy.

Anonymous said...

face it...
published books are an artifact of the past.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...