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Gloria Amescua is a Latina and Tejana writer from Austin, Texas. Her enjoyment of writing stories and poems as a child prompted her to publish many poems, manuscripts, and chapbooks throughout her life. After receiving her B.A. and Masters of Education from University of Texas at Austin, she went on to win first place at the 2013 Austin International Poetry Festival Contest and the Austin Poetry Society Award. She is now a workshop presenter for young adults, and is an active alumna of Hedgebrook’s Writers-in-Residence program. Amescua is most known for her poetry chapbook entitled “Windchimes” and recently published picture book manuscript: Luz Jiménez, No Ordinary Girl. She now resides in Austin and continues to earn awards for her culturally vibrant poetry and prominence in the Texas Latinx community.

Early Life
Amescua was born in Austin, Texas. Her parents are members of the Nahua community, a group of indigenous people originating in Mexico and El Salvador. Her dual identity as a Latina and Tejana helped to mold the major themes present throughout Amescua’s poetry and manuscripts. She writes beautifully what she knows: poems about her mother’s experience as a Tejana, or through the lens of her semi-autobiographical character Luz Jiménez, a Nahua educator and art muse living in Mexico.

Career
Amescua went on to earn a Bachelor’s Degree and Masters of Education from UT at Austin, and worked for some years in education as an English teacher. She has since been published in a variety of books as well as print and online journals. Her excellence in writing has earned many prestigious awards, including the Austin Poetry Society Award and the Christina Sergeyevna Award for poetry. She most recently was chosen among hundreds of writers to receive the Lee and Low 2016 New Voices Award Honor or her poetry manuscript, Luz Jiménez, No Ordinary Girl. She is now an inaugural member of CantoMundo, a national Latinx poetry community. She has often attributed her work with this group as a cause of her continued growth as a poet and a Latina. Additionally, she has made significant contributions to the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators’ Austin Chapter, of which she is a salient member.

Publications
Acentos Review (2012) Texas Poetry Calendar (2013) di-verse-city (2000) Kweli Journal (2014) Generations Literary Journal (2011) Texas Poetry Calendar (2013) Pilgrimage Magazine (2014) Lifting the Sky Southwestern Haiku & Haiga (2010) Bearing the Mask: Southwestern Persona Poems (2016) The Crafty Poet II: A Portable Workshop (2016) Entre Guadalupe y Malinche: Tejanas in Literature and Art (2016)

Analysis
Unsurprisingly, Amescua’s written work heavily features Latinx themes, as told either through her own eyes as she views her family members, or through the lens of a fictional character. Her most recent manuscript, Luz Jiménez, No Ordinary Girl, features a Nahua woman who overcomes various cultural obstacles through her experience as a teacher and art muse in Mexico. Luz, meaning “light” in Spanish, eventually serves, through her teaching, as a link between the Aztecs and her Nahua culture. Although not autobiographical, one can draw many links to Amescua and Luz’s similar spirits.

Happily, Amescua’s themes are, more often than not, positive messages about the life of a Tejana and one’s ability to achieve dreams with hard work and compassion. She dedicates many of her poems to her mother, a woman whom she clearly admires and adores. In her poem, “Fall Into the Fig,” featured in the book Entre Guadalupe y Malinche: Tejanas in Literature and Art, she characterizes her mother as: “More than an uneducated ‘Mexican’. . . / More than a laundress and a cook in the schools / More than our father’s wife and our mother / always a fire of possibility” (69). This passage exemplifies Amescua’s faith in her mother and her belief of the possibility of a different life for her.