The Tortilla Curtain
The Tortilla Curtain (1995) is a novel by U.S. author T.C. Boyle about middle-class values, illegal immigration, xenophobia, poverty, and environmental destruction. Of the ten novels Boyle has written so far, The Tortilla Curtain has turned out to be his most successful. Boyle himself says that when it first came out it was
- ...my most controversial novel. Because it dealt with a hot-button socio-political issue -- illegal immigration in Southern California -- many of the reviewers came into the book with strong prejudices. I took a good deal of abuse, including (my favorite instance) being called "human garbage" on a call-in radio show in San Francisco. As people have had a chance to think about the book more deeply over the course of the past few years, the furor has died down and The Tortilla Curtain has become a modern classic, by far my most popular title, widely read in high schools and universities around the country.
The book consciously evokes the Steinbeck of The Grapes of Wrath, and opens with an epigraph from that novel:
- They ain't human. A human being wouldn't live like they do. A human being couldn't stand it to be so dirty and miserable. [1]
The Tortilla Curtain is the story of two couples who have nothing whatsoever in common except the fact that they live in the same area. The two people the quote from The Grapes of Wrath alludes to are Cándido and América, two young Mexicans who have illegally entered the United States and who are dreaming of the good life in their own little house somewhere in California. Meanwhile, they are homeless and camping in the Topanga Canyon area of Los Angeles, in the hills above Malibu. Another couple, Delaney and Kyra Mossbacher, have also recently moved to Topanga, in order to be closer to nature yet to enjoy the amenities of city life. Wealthy, health-conscious people, Kyra is a successful real estate agent while Delaney keeps house, looks after Kyra's son by her first marriage and writes a regular column for an environmentalist magazine.
The two couples' paths cross unexpectedly when Cándido is hit and injured by Delaney, who is driving his car along the suburban roads near his home. For different reasons, each man prefers not to call the police or an ambulance, and Delaney soothes his conscience by giving Cándido some money to be treated for his injuries. From that moment on, the lives of the two couples are constantly influenced by each other without any of the two sets of characters actually meeting the other one in person again.
After the accident, Cándido's problems deepen. With América pregnant, his shame at not being able to get a job and procure a home and food for his family increases, especially when América decides to find some illegal--and possibly dangerous--work herself. At one point in the novel, they have to go through the trash cans behind a convenience store so as not to starve.
The Mossbachers are also having problems, though of an altogether different nature. Comfortably settled in their new home, they are faced with the cruelty of nature when one of their two pet dogs are killed by a coyote. Also, the majority of inhabitants of their exclusive estate feel increasingly disturbed and threatened by the presence of, as they see it, potentially criminal illegal aliens and vote for a wall to be built around the whole estate.
Candido has a stroke of luck when, at a grocery store, he is given a free turkey by another customer, who has just won it in the store's Thanksgiving promotion. When, back in their shelter, Cándido starts roasting the bird, he inadvertently causes a fire which spreads so quickly that even the gated community the Mossbachers live in has to be evacuated.
In the midst of the escalating disasters, América gives birth to a daughter, whom she suspects might be blind. But the couple of course have no money to have little Soccoro (Spanish: help) examined by a doctor.
Time and again in the novel, however, it is hinted at that the real perpetrators can be found inside rather than outside the projected wall: well-to-do people insensitive to the plight of the have-nots; WASP racists afraid of being overrun by Latinos and of the end of white supremacy; business people employing illegal immigrants to maximise their own profit without caring for the social security of those who work for them; and convicts posing as honourable members of society.
Educational value
The Tortilla Curtain is often read by language classes in high schools all over the world to examine the topic of immigration and the gap between rich and poor.
ISBN numbers
Similar/Related Works
- In Bharati Mukherjee's novel Jasmine (1989), a young Indian woman living as an illegal alien in the United States tries to make ends meet.
- American musical group Eddie From Ohio's song "Cándido & América" is based on the novel.