About the Book
Book: Vivir el Dream
Author: Allison K Garcia
Genre: Christian Latino Fiction
Release Date: May 19, 2017
The fates of an undocumented college student and her mother intertwine with a suicidal businessman’s. As circumstances worsen, will their faith carry them through or will their fears drag them down?
Linda Palacios crossed the border at age three with her mother, Juanita, to escape their traumatic life in Mexico and to pursue the American dream. Years later, Linda nears college graduation. With little hope for the future as an undocumented immigrant, Linda wonders where her life is going.
Tim Draker, a long-unemployed businessman, has wondered the same thing. Overcome with despair, he decides to take his own life. Before he can carry out his plan, he changes course when he finds a job as a mechanic. Embarrassed about working at a garage in the barrio, he lies to his wife in hopes of finding something better.
After Juanita’s coworker gets deported, she takes in her friend’s son, Hector, whom her daughter Linda can’t stand, While Juanita deals with nightmares of her traumatic past, she loses her job and decides to go into business for herself.
Will the three of them allow God to guide them through the challenges to come, or will they let their own desires and goals get in the way of His path?
Click here to purchase your copy.
About the Author
Allison K. Garcia is a Licensed Professional Counselor, but she has wanted to be a writer ever since she could hold a pencil. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers, Shenandoah Valley Writers, Virginia Writers Club, and is Municipal Liaison for Shenandoah Valley NaNoWriMo.
Allison’s short story, “At Heart,” was published in the Winter 2013 edition of From the Depths literary magazine, along with her flash fiction. Her work, “You Shall Receive,” was published in GrayHaven Comics’s 2014 All Women’s anthology. Winning an honorary mention in the ACFW Virginia 2015 short story contest, “Just Another Navidad” was published in A bit of Christmas. Allison’s book, Vivir el Dream, published May 2017, has won several prestigious awards: 2016 ACFW Genesis Contest Finalist, 2018 Eric J. Hoffer Montaigne Medal Finalist, Honorary Mention in the 2018 Eric. J. Hoffer Awards E-book category, and 2018 IAN Book of the Year Awards Finalist in the Christian/Relgious Fiction category. Her highly-anticipated novel, Finding Amor, was released in September 2018.
Latina at heart, Allison has been featured in local newspapers for her connections in the Latino community in Harrisonburg, Virginia. A member of cultural competency committees for work and a participant in several pro-immigrant rallies and other events in her region, she also sings on the worship team and enjoys get-togethers with the hermanos in her church. With the help of her husband, Julio, and their son, Miguel, she has been able to nurture her love for the Latino people.
My Review
Currently immigration is a touchy and controversial topic in this country. I won’t go into full detail on my personal opinions on the topic, but I think we should all be able to agree that it’s a “complicated” topic as much as it is controversial. I used to work with a girl that I would call a friend who was the daughter of migrants workers who at the age of 15 already had a one-year-old baby that she was trying to support. She didn’t have life easy. I also know of people who have been deported for actual violent crimes. It’s not as simple as calling all of them criminals, but they aren’t all harmless either. From both sides of the argument it’s a broken system as we look at it today.
I really like how the author words it in her guest post (below) when she says:
A wonderful thing happens when we’re reading a book. We jump into the shoes of the main character. We understand their plight. Their hopes are our hopes. We feel their story, their dreams, their love, their anguish, their joy. That is one of the great things about reading”.
I couldn’t have said that better myself if I tried. This book is a lesson in empathy. If you thought the argument was black-and-white before this one is sure to at least help you see the gray. Linda’s road isn’t an easy one, and oh how I wished it could be made easier! What made it more difficult to read was that her support system was just as helpless (if not more) than she was.
This book is written in what you would call “Spanglish.” It is mostly in English, but there is a heavy dosage of Spanish throughout. The Spanish is translated for you into English at the bottom, but I don’t think this would be an easy read without at least a basic knowledge of the language. I personally know quite a bit of Spanish but I’m “rusty” at best because I almost never use it anymore. I was able to understand quite a bit of it but I definitely admit to needing the translations in several spots as well. I actually liked that it challenged me a bit, but if it were any other language I don’t think I would have enjoyed it because I would have been overwhelmed with all of the foreign language. So I’ll just leave this note as a heads up for comprehension.
I love a book that can stretch my mind and and challenge me to think deeper. This one truly did that and has left me thinking even more. Allison has truly written a wonderful story and on that I’m sure will stay with me for a long time. I highly recommend it as a book to help understand the times better. It’s unquestioningly a complicated issue, but this one is sure to tug at your heart strings.
*I received a copy of this book through CelebrateLit. Thoughts and opinions expressed are mine alone.
Rating: 
More from Allison K. Garcia
Authenticity and Love
When I wrote my debut novel Vivir el Dream in 2012, I never imagined that it was going to win five awards, that I would be invited to churches and universities and NPR to speak about it, or that it would be taught on a college campus. That’s not why I wrote it. Sure, I hoped that people would read it and love it, but I never imagined the impact it would have and the book’s relevance seven years later.
There were two main reasons I wrote Vivir el Dream: authenticity and love.
They go hand-in-hand, but I shall tell you a little about how God sparked the story in my heart.
In 2011, we had three church members deported, and one of them was a dear friend—a good man who loves his family, greeted the congregation at the door, helped take the collection every Sunday and set up the tables and chairs for special programs. To see our friend, and hermano en Cristo, treated in a way that traumatized his children and nearly tore apart up his family, was something that broke my heart. But what broke it worse was seeing how the media spoke about undocumented people and sadder yet, having conversations with other Christians who spoke anger and hatred towards “illegals.”
God spoke to my heart about this. How could my brothers and sisters in Christ be so unkind and uncaring? Hadn’t they read The Good Samaritan? Didn’t they remember about loving our neighbors? It happened again and again, and I realized, with God’s help, that one of the challenges was that people didn’t understand the real story. They were fed a certain stereotype by the media, an image of a tattooed person in a gang or a drug dealer.
They hadn’t actually met anyone undocumented. Or at least they hadn’t realized they had.
In my life and in my job as a counselor, I had met tons of undocumented immigrants, and I had known them the great majority to be kind, hard-working people who wanted the best for their family and were willing to risk it all for the chance at the American dream. I saw love, I saw bravery, I saw strength, I saw faith. And I believe that God showed me those things so that I could reflect that in my novels.
A wonderful thing happens when we’re reading a book. We jump into the shoes of the main character. We understand their plight. Their hopes are our hopes. We feel their story, their dreams, their love, their anguish, their joy. That is one of the great things about reading. We escape our own lives for a while and experience a new adventure, gain a new understanding. We go places and meet people and do things we would never be able to in our own lives.
So that is what God placed on my heart to share with the world: an authentic experience of a mother and daughter who are undocumented Christians.
It’s controversial, but then so was the Gospel. What is more controversial than Jesus’ teachings? To love those who hate us. To turn the other cheek. To give away all possessions to join Him. I mean, what is more controversial than being asked to believe that a man born over 2,000 years was the Son of God and was risen from the dead after three days and that giving one’s heart over to Him will save one’s soul so as to live for all of eternity with God in Heaven?
And yet, that is the very heart of the Gospel.
To love God and to love others.
So, in the spirit of loving God and listening to Him, I wrote Vivir el Dream and published it even when the world pushed against it and continues to do so, perhaps more now than in 2012. All the more reason to love our neighbor more and to hold tighter onto God and His teachings.
I hope you enjoy my book. I hope it takes you on a new, heartwrenching adventure that carries you from the anguish in crossing a desert with your three-year-old daughter on your hip to the freedom in cooking tamales in the kitchen while swaying to cumbia, from the stabbing fear of living in a country that doesn’t want you to experiencing the joy of first love, and from the desperation of staring down an empty barrel to the understanding of truth for your fellow man.
God bless. And happy reading.
Blog Stops
Multifarious, March 16
100 pages per hour, March 17
Stephanie’s Life of Determination, March 18
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, March 19
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, March 20
Texas Book-aholic, March 21
janicesbookreviews, March 22
A Reader’s Brain, March 23
Abba’s Prayer Warrior Princess, March 24
Inklings and notions, March 25
The Becca Files, March 26
Real World Bible Study, March 27
Power of Words, March 28
Just the Write Escape, March 29
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Allison is giving away a grand prize of a gift basket that includes 4 Christian novels, secret recipes for some of the Mexican cuisine described in Vivir el Dream, and authentic arts and crafts from Guadalajara, Mexico or by preference, a $40 Amazon gift card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/dd7f/viver-el-dream-celebration-tour-giveaway
This looks like a really good book. I didn’t know the author was also published in From the Depths. I enjoy that magazine 🙂
sounds good.
Great review, Becca! Love that quote so much.
Thanks Nicole 🙂
I am enjoying these tours and finding all the terrific books my family is enjoying reading. Thanks for bringing them to us and keep up the good work.
Thanks glad you enjoy them!
Thank you sooo much for your review!
You’re very welcome! 🙂