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Common Campus Read

Your guide to resources related to MSMU's biennial Common Campus Read.

Reyna Grande: Video

Reyna Grande: Biography

English | Español

Reyna Grande is the author of the bestselling memoirs, The Distance Between Us (Atria, 2012) and A Dream Called Home (Atria, 2018), where she writes about her life before and after she arrived in the United States from Mexico as an undocumented child immigrant. 

Her other works include the novels, Across a Hundred Mountains (Atria, 2006), Dancing with Butterflies (Washington Square Press, 2009), and  A Ballad of Love and Glory (Atria, 2022), a novel set during the Mexican-American War.  The Distance Between Us is also available as a young reader’s edition from Simon & Schuster’s Children’s Division, Aladdin. She is the co-editor of an anthology by and about undocumented Americans called Somewhere We Are Human: Authentic Voices on Migration, Survival and New Beginnings (HarperVia, 2022). Her books have been adopted as the common read selection by schools, colleges, and cities across the country. 

Reyna has received an American Book Award, the El Premio Aztlán Literary Award, and the International Latino Book Award. She was a finalist for the prestigious National Book Critics Circle Awards. She was honored with a Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano/Latino Literature, a Latino Spirit Award, and a Writers for Writers Award from Poets & Writers. The young reader’s version of The Distance Between Us received an International Literacy Association Children’s Book Award.

Writing about immigration, family separation, language trauma, the price of the American Dream, and her writing journey, Reyna’s work has appeared in The New York Times, the Dallas Morning News, CNN, The Lily at The Washington Post, Buzzfeed, among others. In March 2020, she was a guest on Oprah’s Book Club television special. 

Reyna is a proud member of the Macondo Writer’s Workshop founded by Sandra Cisneros, where she has also served as faculty. She has also taught at Bread Loaf Writers Conference, VONA (Voices of Our Nation’s Arts), Under the Volcano Writer’s Conference, and Grubstreet’s The Muse and the Marketplace, among others. 

Born in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico, Reyna was two years old when her father left for the U.S. to find work. Her mother followed her father north two years later, leaving Reyna and her siblings behind in Mexico. In 1985, when Reyna was nine, she left Iguala to make her own journey north.

Reyna attended Pasadena City College before transferring to the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she went on to become the first in her family to graduate from university. She holds a BA and an MFA in creative writing. 

 

Sonia Guiñansaca: Video

Sonia Guiñansaca: Biography

Sonia Guiñansaca

Sonia Guiñansaca is an international award winning queer migrant indigenous Kichwa-Kañari poet, cultural organizer and social justice activist. Born in Ecuador (Kichwa-Kañari) , at the age of 5, Sonia Guiñansaca migrated to the United States to reunite with her parents in New York City.

Sonia has over 17 years of movement and cultural organizing experience that began when they were among the first waves of young people to publicly come out as undocumented. They emerged as a national leader in the migrant artistic and political communities where they coordinated and participated in groundbreaking civil disobedience actions. Guiñansaca helped build some of the largest undocumented organizations in the US, including co-founding some of the first artistic projects by and for undocumented writers and artists. Sonia has worked for over a decade in both policy and cultural efforts building equitable infrastructures for migrant artists. They have been awarded residencies and fellowships from Voices of Our Nation Arts Foundation, Poetry Foundation, British Council, Creative Time, and the Hemispheric Institute for Performance & Politics. Guiñansaca has performed at the Met, Lincoln Center, the NYC Public Theater, Lehmann Maupin Gallery, La Mama Gallery, The Nuyorican Poets Cafe, and has been featured on Interview Magazine, Ms.Magazine, Teen Vogue, Diva Magazine UK, CNN, NBC, Democracy Now! and PBS to name a few. Their migration and cultural equity work has also taken them to London and Mexico City to advise on migrant policy and arts programming. They have performed in Ecuador, Colombia, U.K and across the United States. Guiñansaca consults for national social justice organizations, cultural institutions, and foundations on artists convening, cultural activations, and civic engagement. Clients include: Fwd.us, National Employment Law Project, Latina Institute, Your Neighborhood Museum, Inner City Struggle, and The Rasmuson Foundation.

Sonia self-published their debut mini chapbook Nostalgia and Borders in 2016. In November 2023 they partnered with Severo Editorial to publish Nostalgia Y Fronteras, Sonia’s poetry collection translated in Spanish & Kichwa. Sonia embarked in their first international book tour through Ecuador for the release of Nostalgia Y Fronterars, where they traveled from Guayaquil, Cañar/Cuenca, and Quito. Now, represented by Johanna Castillo at Writers House Agency , Sonia is also working on their first memoir, and recently co-edited the highly anticipated anthology “SomeWhere We Are Human” (HarperCollins June 2022).

Sonia is also a contributor to Daughters of Latin America Anthology, and the new edition of ColonizeThis! Anthology (2019 Seal Press), a contributor to Migrant Feelings, Migrant Knowledge Building a Community Archive (2022 University of Texas Press), featured on Stop Telling Women to Smile (2020 Seal Press), What Things Cost: An Anthology for the People (2023 The University Press of Kentucky) . In April 2022 Guiñansaca launched House of Alegría, a multi-fold creative project supporting emerging undocumented Queer/Trans/Non-binary artists. Guiñansaca is releasing their second chapbook #PapiFemme soon.