Summary and Reviews of Alligator Tears by Edgar Gomez

Alligator Tears by Edgar Gomez

Alligator Tears

A Memoir in Essays

by Edgar Gomez
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  • Critics' Consensus (7):
  • First Published:
  • Feb 11, 2025, 256 pages
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About This Book

Book Summary

A darkly comic memoir-in-essays about the scam of the American Dream and doing whatever it takes to survive in the Sunshine State—from the award-winning author of High-Risk Homosexual.

In Florida, one of the first things you're taught as a child is that if you're ever chased by a wild alligator, the only way to save yourself is to run away in zigzags. It's a lesson on survival that has guided much of Edgar Gomez's life.

Like the night his mother had a stroke while he and his brother stood frozen at the foot of her bed, afraid she'd be angry if they called for an ambulance they couldn't afford. Gomez escaped into his mind, where he could tell himself nothing was wrong with his family. Zig. Or years later, as a broke college student, he got on his knees to put sandals on tourists' smelly, swollen feet for minimum wage at the Flip Flop Shop. After clocking out, his crew of working-class, queer, Latinx friends changed out of their uniforms in the passenger seats of each other's cars, speeding toward the relief they found at Pulse nightclub in Orlando. Zag. From committing a little bankruptcy fraud for the money for veneers to those days he paid his phone bill by giving massages to closeted men on vacation, back when he and his friends would Venmo each other the same emergency twenty dollars over and over. Zig. Zag. Gomez survived this way as long as his legs would carry him.

Alligator Tears is a fiercely defiant memoir-in-essays charting Gomez's quest to claw his family out of poverty by any means necessary and exposing the archetype of the humble poor person for what it is: a scam that insists we remain quiet and servile while we wait for a prize that will always be out of reach. For those chasing the American Dream and those jaded by it, Gomez's unforgettable story is a testament to finding love, purpose, and community on your own terms, smiling with all your fake teeth.

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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

These 10 sincere and feisty essays evince Gomez's determination to find meaning in his past and work towards a hopeful collective future. Although medical crises and tragedies are threads running through the collection, Gomez maintains a light tone. Life is sometimes unjust or demeaning for him as a queer person of color, yet he has found powerful communities of care in person and via his writing. In New York City, he volunteers at a food pantry run by a gay bar and as a model for trans makeup artists-in-training. His anecdotes often touch on pop culture and are fun and sex-positive. The stories of rekindling connections with family members are touching. There are a couple of weaker essays, but overall, the book is revealing not just of the author but also more generally of the intersectional challenges commonly faced by queer second-generation immigrants of color...continued

Full Review Members Only (859 words)

(Reviewed by Rebecca Foster).

Media Reviews

Paste
Humorous, heartfelt, and refreshingly sincere, Alligator Tears is a meta-level how-to guide for putting words down on the page when the world would rather you not, and a raw and energetic account of coming of age as a queer Latino man on the periphery of the happiest place on Earth.

Today
Relatable, funny and deeply heartfelt, this memoir is one not to miss.

Los Angeles Times
Like fellow memoirists Édouard Louis and Annie Ernaux, Gomez approaches life-writing as a way not just to process but to reprocess the past... . Gomez is especially incisive on the American caste system, with which he, like his parents, is intimately familiar... . It doesn't read like a hardscrabble memoir. It's nostalgia with a bite, but also a wry kind of affection... . Alligator Tears sings.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
Meticulously evoked and darkly comic ... Heartening ... This portrait of the artist as a young flip-flop salesman will inspire, amuse, and empower its audience.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Triumphant ... dazzling ... Even as he offers a pitiless, self-aware view of life on the margins, Gomez remains funny, candid, and unfailingly stylish. This delivers a welcome jolt to the coming-of-age memoir formula.

Booklist
Gomez is sweet and conversational, like a friend readers have known for life: nostalgic, playful, and caring...It is beautiful to get to know the life of this artist, whose endearing world will remain with readers long after they've finished the book.

Author Blurb Alejandro Varela, author of National Book Award finalist The Town of Babylon
No one writes about the terrors of late-stage capitalism with such humor, candor, and aplomb. In every sentence, Gomez elucidates the unnecessary horrors of suffering in the American context. To our benefit (and relief), he accomplishes this feat with the wonder of a child and the wit of a satirist. Affecting and inspiring, Alligator Tears is more proof that Gomez is a writer who deserves our attention.

Author Blurb James McBride, New York Times bestselling author of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
Edgar Gomez is a young writer of deep talent and enormous grace. Alligator Tears speaks for the lost tribes of 'other,' those who serve our food, do our taxes, and mind our children. They walk the earth among us, invisible, without a voice. I am so glad that Edgar Gomez has given them one.

Author Blurb Kristen Arnett, author of With Teeth
Alligator Tears is gorgeous, poignant, and raw, chock-full of hope and want and irrepressible, aching beauty. This is the kind of Florida writing that I love most: a daring, swampy slick of a collection where the humidity hangs like a hug. Edgar Gomez is a tremendous talent. I'll read anything he writes.

Reader Reviews

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Beyond the Book



The Memoir-in-Essays

Compared to a traditional memoir, a memoir-in-essays allows for a more thematic approach and a diversity of styles and formats. It generally prioritizes ideas and memorable scenes or vignettes, and its essays might be linked or discrete. The essays in Alligator Tears by Edgar Gomez appear in roughly chronological order, but a memoir-in-essays can break from convention by eschewing chronology. A looser timeline can be a way of acknowledging that life is usually not a clear trajectory from one phase to another; instead, it contains recurrences, contrasts, and connections. As Sarah Kasbeer wrote for The Rumpus in 2020, "Exploring a complex network of interactions sounds like the work of an essayist, whereas the projection of time is clearly ...

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Read-Alikes

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