Best L.A. Novel Ever: T. C. Boyle's The Tortilla Curtain vs. Hector Tobar's The Tattooed Soldier, Round 1

L.A. Weekly is determining the best L.A. novel ever by holding a tournament featuring 32 of our favorites in head-to-head matchups, until there's only one novel standing. For further reading:
*Best L.A. Novel Ever: The Tournament Brackets
*Best L.A. Novel Ever: More Matchups

Set in Topanga Canyon not too long after the L.A. riots, T.C. Boyle's The Tortilla Curtain is a novel about immigration. There are immigrants in the story, notably the Mexican couple Cándido and América Rincón, who camp by a creek below Spanish Mission style homes while looking for work, but you'll find recent arrivals in almost any contemporary Los Angeles novel. To say we live in a city of immigrants is to state the obvious. The Tortilla Curtain isn't just populated with people from elsewhere; you might say its main character is the actual social issue itself.

Delany and Kyra Mossbacher live in Arroyo Blanco Estates, a community of annoying richies who, when they're not recycling Diet Coke cans, shopping for high-fiber bars or driving down the canyon road in Mercedes, are debating whether to build a big gate in front of their neighborhood. It's just one of many walls discussed in the novel, all of which would be constructed by Mexicans, because that's the American way, güey. These walls come to symbolize the whole of the immigration debate, and the many struggles of the Rincón family after Delany hits Cándido with his car become swallowed up in the muddled, muddy torrent of that larger debate.

After a fire destroys a property Kyra is trying to sell, her inner thoughts become all the more real for being so cliché:

It was the Mexicans who'd done this. Illegals. Goons with their hats turned backwards on their heads. Sneaking across the border, ruining the schools, gutting property values and freeloading on welfare, and as if that weren't enough, now they were burning everybody else out too. They were like the barbarians outside the gates of Rome, only they were already inside, polluting the creek and crapping in the woods, threatening people and spraying graffiti all over everything, and where was it going to end?

Hector Tobar's The Tattooed Soldier, by contrast, is a novel about immigrants. The book opens with Guatemalan intellectual Antonio Bernal and his Korean landlord struggling to understand each other's second-language English after the rent is long overdue, and it quickly propels itself into a tale of revenge for wrongs committed over 2,000 miles south of the border.

After several nights sleeping in a lean-to on the palimpsest of Crown Hill, Bernal walks to MacArthur Park and discovers the Fort Bragg-trained Guatemalan solider who slew his wife and son years earlier in San Cristóbal. The son of a bitch is in Los Angeles. Guillermo Longoria, the titular solider, has lots of blood on his boots, so he doesn't recognize his compatriot and returns to his chess game, unaware a collision course has been plotted that will lead straight to the middle of the L.A. riots. Longoria is clearly the baddie in this scenario, but Tobar still instills a humanity in this former farm boy who was unwillingly conscripted and made into a man of slaughter.

Both The Tortilla Curtain and The Tattooed Soldier are set around the time of the L.A. riots. They both stare straight into the eyes of immigrants. They both describe the people and the terrain of particular parts of the city. So which is the better L.A. novel?

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8 comments
LewisBMarx
LewisBMarx

@WMEBooks @LAWeekly NWA Dr Dre Fuck the Police, Scalping Bears for Rees Jones fairways. Catholic cigar whorehouse pride moons Holy Family

55tom55
55tom55

i wasn't born rich...i made half my money in real estate (bought one house sold it bought a bigger house sold it and so on) and the other in laundromats (currently have 3 locations)...i used to have a large house in Pasadena with gates, long driveway, hedges...one evening my alarm off and someone was trying to steal my car from my garage and he succeeded but they caught him...so i/we (have a family now) downgraded and now live in mid-city in a house that's no different from some others just 2 miles away but location location location...and nothing has changed other than now my car, my wife's car, our house doesn't reflect how much we have and we have a lot...our son still goes to Buckley (our neighbors don't know that unless they followed us there), our neighbors aren't that friendly but some are, people's cars still get stolen...if a thief knew how much cash i have hidden in my house i'd be dead and they'd be 400k richer...no one is nicer to me now that i don't flaunt my wealth than when i did...being rich is not a secret club...i drive a honda, used to have a ferrari...point is, just because you're rich doesn't mean you're evil...life doesn't change whether you live behind a gate or not...having a gate makes it a bit harder for them...and that's about all...+ you get to walk around barely clothed when you live behind walls...

jmerriman
jmerriman

@keithplocek @LAWeeklyArts Ask the Dust

keithplocek
keithplocek

@LAWeeklyArts OK, I just ordered Ask the Dust online. This is on you, @jmerriman.

jmerriman
jmerriman

@keithplocek You'll thank me later!

ComradeDan
ComradeDan

@LAWeekly if Bukowski or Fante don't win your magazine is horse shit.

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