Writing Latinos

Mirta Ojito: Deeper Than the Ocean

37 min · 15 apr 2026
aflevering Mirta Ojito: Deeper Than the Ocean artwork

Beschrijving

The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Mirta Ojito, who has written two non-fiction books, has now written her first novel. Deeper Than the Ocean (published by Union Square & Co.) is a family drama that moves between Spain, Cuba, and the United States. In this episode of Writing Latinos, we talk with Ojito about the meaning of “Spain” for Latinos and the desire to return. We also discuss mothers and daughters, the obligations of love, the sinking of the S.S. Valbanera, and our shared fear of swimming in open bodies of water. Thanks so much for listening!

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aflevering Ada Ferrer: Keeper of My Kin artwork

Ada Ferrer: Keeper of My Kin

Today’s guest on Writing Latinos is Ada Ferrer. Her last book Cuba: An American History, won the Pulitzer Prize. Ferrer is out with a new book titled Keeper of My Kin: Memoir of an Immigrant Daughter [https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Keeper-of-My-Kin/Ada-Ferrer/9781668025659], published by Scribner. It’s an intimate, devastating, beautifully written account of her family’s migration from Cuba to the United States, and how the Cuban Revolution both broke and made her family. It’s also a meditation on the craft of history itself. Geraldo Cadava reviewed it for The Atlantic. You can read it here: “How Cuban History Broke a Family.” [https://www.theatlantic.com/books/2026/05/ada-ferrer-cuban-family-history-keeper-of-my-kin-book-review/687210/] After a long time teaching at NYU, Ferrer recently moved to Princeton, where she teaches history.

10 jun 202637 min
aflevering Mary Mendoza: Deadly Divide artwork

Mary Mendoza: Deadly Divide

In this week’s episode of Writing Latinos, we talk with Mary E. Mendoza about her new book Deadly Divide: How Insects, Pathogens, and People Defied the US-Mexico Border, published by The University of North Carolina Press. Mendoza teaches history at The Pennsylvania State University. In Deadly Divide, she blurs the boundary between humans and animals, and borderlands history and environmental history. We talk about the similar ways that humans, ticks, cattle, and lice were racialized. I didn’t even know animals could have racial identities! We also discuss how the US and Mexican governments, and ranchers on both sides of the border, took the same approach to restricting immigration and stopping the spread of animal-borne diseases. This is the rare episode where listeners interested in Latino history and identity can also satisfy their inner science nerd. Thanks for listening!

27 mei 202636 min
aflevering Jaquira Díaz: This is the Only Kingdom artwork

Jaquira Díaz: This is the Only Kingdom

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