Hamilton Books
Pages: 74
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-5883-6 • Paperback • September 2012 • $40.99 • (£35.00)
978-0-7618-5884-3 • eBook • September 2012 • $38.50 • (£30.00)
Julian Segura Camacho is a lecturer at West Los Angeles and Mission College.
Preface
Introduction
1. South Inglewood, 1981
2. My First Communion
3. A New Religion and Church
4. Westchester Assembly of God
5. Bible Class
6. Youth Ministry
7. Royal Rangers
8. Prayer Groups
9. Sunday Services
10. Riverside
11. Trouble
12. By Your Own Hands
13. The Deaths
14. 2000
15. The Wedding
Camacho has struck out a path of independent Chicano research that sheds light on issues avoided or ignored by more mainstream researchers.
— James Diego Vigil, Ph.D., professor of criminology, law, and society, University of California, Irvine, author of From Indians to Chicanos and Barrio Gangs
Camacho is a unique and appreciated scholar of the Mexican American experience. This work, the most recent of the author’s several contributions to Mexican American studies, is a poignant commentary on the conflicts, realities, and new future trends of the Mexican American experience.
— Robert LaCarra, Ph.D., professor of Chicano studies, Los Angeles Valley College
If Jesus Could Not Save Himself, How Would He Save Me? is another gut punch in the arsenal of the life and times of Julian Camacho. It brandishes a harsh truth not many of us are willing to accept with a take no prisoners style of storytelling.
— Oscar Barajas, Eastside correspondent, Newstaco.com
We hear of Mexican Americans as Christians, particularly Catholics, but we rarely read about their faith. Julian . . . provides us insight to a Protestant religious way of life in the 1980s when we were all Reagan’s babies.
— Marcos A. Ramos, Undergraduate Advisor for the College of Letters and Science, University of California, Berkeley