Reyna Grande is a Mexican author living in the United States.
Biography
Grande grew up in poverty with her two siblings in Iguala, Guerrero. Her father had came to the U.S. to get money to build a house in Iguala but her father wasn't successful. Her father called for Grande’s mother, who left Grande and her siblings with her grandmother. At the age of about ten, her father came back to try to take her eldest sibling to the United States, but Grande and her other siblings wanted to go as well. Grande herself came to the U.S. as an undocumented child immigrant via an illegal border crossing at the age of about 10. She faced many trials and tribulations in becoming the first in her family to obtain a college degree. She always tried her hardest to be noticed by her father when it came to her success in her education. Grande attended Pasadena City College and later transferred to University of California, Santa Cruz, where she obtained a B.A. degree in literature/creative writing. She later received her M.F.A. in creative writing from Antioch University. She has been honored with an American Book Award, the El Premio Aztlan Literary Award, and most recently, the Luis Leal Award for Distinction in Chicano/Latino Literature. Grande is a member of the prestigious Macondo Writers Workshop, the workshop founded by Sandra Cisneros. She has taught creative writing at UCLA Extension's Writer's Program, at VONA, the Latino Writer's Conference, and more.
Work
Grande's first novel, Across a Hundred Mountains. draws heavily on her own experiences growing up in Mexico and as an undocumented immigrant in the U.S. The book was selected by a number of common read programs. Grande's second novel, Dancing with Butterflies, was published to critical acclaim. An excerpt of Dancing with Butterflies was published in 2008 as a short story, titled "Adriana," in Latinos in Lotusland: An Anthology of Contemporary Southern California Literature, edited by Daniel Olivas. In 2012, Atria Books published Grande's memoir, The Distance Between Us, a coming-of-age story about her life before and after coming to the U.S. as an undocumented child immigrant. In an interview published by the Los Angeles Review of Books on 6 December 2012, Grande explained why she decided to part from fiction to tell her story: The Distance Between Us was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 2016, Aladdin, a division of Simon and Schuster, republished the memoir as a young readers adaptation for ages 10-14. As with Across a Hundred Mountains, The Distance Between Us has been selected for a number of common read programs such as the 2018 Keker First Year Common Read at UNC Greensboro, Rochester Reads 2018, MacReads 2018 at Linfield College, the One Book/One Michiana 2018, All Henrico Reads 2018, Notre Dame Academy Common Reader 2017, the CityRead Book 2017 in Brentwood, CA, Timberland Reads Together 2017 in Washington, the 2017 One Book, One Canyon in Telluride, CO, the 2017 Estes Park One Book, One Valley, the 2017 Cal Poly Pomona Common Read, the 2017 Northern Kentucky UniversityFirst Year Experience, the 2017 Avila University First Year Experience, the 2017 Marist College Common Read, the 2017 Cal State University, Monterey Bay Common Reading Experience, the 2016 One Book/One Community in Saginaw, MI, the 2016 Colorado Mountain College Common Reader Selection, the 2016 Camarillo Reads Selection in Camarillo, CA, the 2015 One Book/One Villanova at Villanova University, PA, the 2015 Sandy Springs Reads selection in Sandy Springs, GA, the 2015 Los Angeles City College Book Program Selection, CA, the 2015 Mount San Jacinto College Common Read Selection, the 2015 Read 2 Succeed Selection at Norco College, the 2015 Roswell Reads Selection in Roswell, GA, 2015 One Book/One Leyden selection at Leyden High School, IL, the 2014 One Maryland, One Book, the 2014 One Community, One Book selection from the U of Iowa Center for Human Rights, the 2014 Santa Rosa Junior College Reads, the 2014 One Book, One Community at San Juan College, the 2014 Rolling Meadows High School Summer Reading Program, the 2014-15 “Book in Common” at Butte College/Chico State University, the Grand Valley State University 2013 “Common Reading” selection, the California State University-Los Angeles “First Year Experience” Selection, the 2014 Goshen College, “First Year Experience” Selection. In October 2018, the much-anticipated sequel, A Dream Called Home, was released by Atria, earning a starred review from Publishers Weekly. “This uplifting story of fortitude and resilience looks deeply into the complexities of immigration and one woman’s struggle to adapt and thrive in America." People Magazine said of the book, “The emotional and practical challenges for a young immigrant are on full display in Grande’ s evocative, inspiring memoir.”