User:Librarygurl/sandbox/Demetria Martinez

Demetria Martinez is an American activist, poet, and novelist. She was born on July 10, 1960 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. She is a graduate of Princeton University with BA from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. She has been an editor for the National Catholic Review in Tucson, Arizona since 1990. She teaches in the annual William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences at the University of Massachusetts Boston. In 1988 Martinez was charged with conspiracy for allegedly transporting two Salvadoran women refugees into the US. She was later acquitted of the charges.

Works

 * Three Times a Woman: Chicana Poetry (includes the poem "Turning"), Bilingual Press/Review (Tempe, AZ), 1989 ISBN: 978-0916950910
 * MotherTongue, Bilingual Press/Editorial Bilingue (Tempe, AZ), 1994, translated into Spanish by Ana Maria de la Fuente and published as Lengua madre, Seix Barral (Barcelona, Spain), 1996 ISBN: 978-0345416568
 * Breathing between the Lines: Poems, University of Arizona Press (Tucson, AZ), 1997 ISBN: 978-0816517985
 * The Devil's Workshop, University of Arizona Press (Tucson, AZ), 2002 ISBN: 978-0816521975
 * Confessions of a Berlitz-Tape Chicana (Chicana and Chicano Visions of the Americas series) ISBN: 978-0806137223
 * The Block Captain's Daughter (Chicana and Chicano Visions of the Americas series) ISBN: 978-0806142913

Awards
Confessions of a Berlitz-Tape Chicana won the best biography 2006 International Latino Book Award. In 1994 Mother Tongue won Western States Book Award for fiction. She won first prize at the Thirteenth Annual Chicano Literary Arts Contest, for the poem "Turning."