The Battle of Tomochic

Memoirs of a Second Lieutenant

Heriberto Frías author Barbara Jamison translator Antonio Saborit editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:10th Feb '05

Currently unavailable, currently targeted to be due back around 18th July 2025, but could change

The Battle of Tomochic cover

Tomochic is a controversial and celebrated example of Mexican fiction. Tomochic is the fictional narration of the 1892 military campaign that resulted in the massacre of the small village of Tomochic, located in the Tarahumara mountains and ordered by the dictatorial regime of Porfirio Díaz. The work is narrated by an eyewitness, the then second lieutenant, Heriberto Frías, and written by him in collaboration with Joaquin Clausell, editor of the newspaper which published it in serial form between March and April of 1893. For a period after the series' publication, the author chose to maintain anonymity. It was expressly this stance which excited more public interest than any other Mexican writer of the 19th century and which eventually led to a drawn out trial to uncover the identity of the author and to implicate him. For, although it is a work of fiction, the general plot of the work, involving a confrontation between a professional army and a handful of citizens, was too similar to the actual massacre as to not be seen by Porfirio Díaz as a reprovement of himself and his regime. As a piece of literature, the novel is also admired for its incorporation of two important trends of the nineteenth century-history as literature and the war novel.

ISBN: 9780195117431

Dimensions: 210mm x 140mm x 15mm

Weight: 263g

208 pages