Manuel Muñoz is the author of two previous collections and a novel. He is the recipient of a Whiting Writers Award, three O. Henry Awards, and has appeared in Best American Short Stories. A native of Dinuba, California, he lives in Tucson, Arizona.
"Muñoz's prose is shining and hypnotic, and suffused with care and
tenderness. This is one of the best short story collections to come
around in recent years."--Michael Schaub, NPR.org, Best Books of
2022 "Hauntingly simple. . . . In these surprising, vivid stories,
worries are deeply felt but not often spoken aloud, and obligation
to kin and the need to survive outweigh much else."--The Atlantic,
"10 Most Thought-Provoking Books of 2022"
"This collection pushes the reader to appreciate life's small
moments of unexpected tenderness with fresh eyes."--Brenda Peynado,
New York Times Book Review "The fact that a mind as fine and
compassionate as Muñoz's exists lifts me up."--George Saunders
"Gay, straight, American-born or American-dreaming, the characters
in this collection exist on the verge of oblivion, but the book
out-Steinbecks Steinbeck in its manifestation of the human in
places we too rarely dare look."--Oprah Daily "Simply put, Muñoz's
stories are as observant as they are revealing -- full of nuanced
subtext and bracingly honest depictions of vulnerability and hope,
love and regret, and everything in between. They deserve all the
attention they can get."--Alexis Burling, San Francisco
Chronicle
"Muñoz brings tenderness and immediacy to these fully realised
stories of secrets and concealment, longings, vulnerability, and
imperfect escape, creating an expansive and memorable
world."--David Hayden, The Guardian
"Muñoz's luminous story collection . . . portrays a community of
Mexican and Mexican American farmworkers in California's Central
Valley. . . . Their daily difficulties are tenderly laid bare. . .
. Muñoz once worked in the same fields, as did his parents and
siblings, and his empathetic stories convey a realistic sense of
the toll such labor takes on bodies and minds."--Becky Meloan, The
Washington Post "Manuel Muñoz's third story collection solidifies
his position as a master of the short story. The Consequences
offers insights not just into relationships in families,
neighborhoods, and communities, but among strangers who meet on a
bus and come together to share the struggles of 21st-century
immigrant life."--Jane Ciabattari, Lit Hub "Nuanced, thoughtful,
often moving stories."--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"...Muñoz delivers breathtaking views into his characters'
hardscrabble world, and evokes the heat of their yearning. This
packs a hell of a punch."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Lucid and elegantly written, The Consequences tells the stories of
characters who ache for one another or for ephemeral moments of
release; who ache -- bodily -- from a life spent harvesting the
sweetness that will grace other tables."--Los Angeles Times "Full
of nuance and heart, Muñoz's writing is honest and unforgettable,
marking him as a master storyteller."--Electric Literature,
"Favorite Story Collections of 2022" "Muñoz's writing quietly
dazzles with its unforced, patient, and lyrical lines."--Erin
Douglass, Christian Science Monitor "Haunting, powerful, humble,
precise, this collection shook my being. Manuel Muñoz is a great
American writer who sees with his heart--as great as Juan Rulfo in
writing about the poor. I wish I had written these
stories."--Sandra Cisneros "These stories are evanescent,
unforgettable, taking us deep into California's Central Valley, the
homeland Manuel Muñoz has for years given to the world as a place
of glimmering mystery, tule fog, and the yearning of his characters
for love and absolution. Each story reveals an entire life. Muñoz
is one of the best writers working in America."--Susan Straight
"Manuel Muñoz's stories are melancholy, assured, and unforgettable.
Like a porch light at midnight, they strike a circle of stark
dreamlike clarity around their characters, even as the darkness
gathers in."--Colin Barrett
"I envy that I didn't write these stories myself. . . . [Manuel
Muñoz] really just did his highest work, his genius highest work.
And I'm in admiration."--Sandra Cisneros, The Independent Electric
Lit "11 Books About Seasonal and Migrant Farmworkers in America"
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