ISBN: 1-931010-18-8
264 pp. | paper only | $16.00
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by
Ron Arias
Moving
Target is the memoir of journalist Ron Arias. It is an exploration
of his childhood, the search for his father, and the fruit of his
desire for a connection between his past and present. Ariass
father was a career army man who was held as a POW during the Korean
War. After his return to the United States, he rules his family
with an iron hand. Eventually, his marriage unravels. Ariass
mother subsequently dies and his father abruptly severs all ties
with his son and disappears. Propelled by this and other tragedies
in his life, Arias becomes a reporter who covers earthquakes, bombings,
and other disasters. During the next fourteen years, he searches
for his father only to find that he has died. Arias sets out to
learn as much as he can about his father and his experiences in
the war, interviewing numerous people who knew him; and in the process,
he learns that his father was suspected of being a spy. His father
becomes an elusive moving target that he seems to chase throughout
his life. Through his extensive research and his job as a reporter
of death and destruction, Ariass connection to his parents
intensifies and he begins to understand them in a way that he could
not when they were alive.
Ron Arias, a prolific writer of both journalism and creative
literature, is currently a senior writer for People magazine. He
is the author of The Road to Tamazunchale, a Chicano
Classics title that was recently translated into Spanish
and released as El camino a Tamazunchale (Bilingual Press
2002).
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