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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An entertaining series of vignettes, ala "feminist Latina",
By Veronica Samanas (Chicago) - See all my reviews
This review is from: How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents (Plume Contemporary Fiction) (Paperback)
Characteristic of the immigrant novel looking back upon one's beginnings, Julia Alvarez' novel begins in a reverse chronological order. The story introduces 39 year old Yolanda returning to her home in the Dominican Republic after an absence of five years. She is greeted by her extended family of aunts and cousins who still live a well to do lifestyle in a junta regime. It was the same Trujillo regime that caused Yolanda's parents and three sisters to flee their homeland in the early 1960's to the U.S. The story returns through a series of vignettes to the girls experiences and customs in a more genteel era. Where maids and chauffeurs were the order of the day, it lays the foundation for the sense of disillusionment and deprivation the girls feel in the United States where confrontations with schoolmates and unsavory exhibitionists only fuel their resilience. In addition to the normal difficulties associated with growing up, the girls contend with the confusion of having to forsake their native land with its Latin culture, tropical environment, extended family life, for a struggle with a strange language and even stranger culture. While in the Dominican Republic their mother, Laura, feeds the need in the "four girls" to seek their individuality by dressing them in identical outfits which differ only in color for each girl. The traditions and customs of the old both identify and isolate the girls in their new environment. The stories weave a tapestry of familial love, honor, confusion and tension. The girls are forever caught between who they were and where they came from, but never lose sight of who they have become. The author has presented a colorful tale in a semi-autobiographical work. Julia Alvarez had experienced being a minority living in the United States as a small child of 10 when she left the Dominican Republic. She touches the themes of minorities living in American society, the conflict of tradition versus change, and the role of the artist within society. It is an engaging and entertaining read, never boring, just like the Garcia girls.
26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I have read Esmeralda, Isabel & Cristina. Julia is my voice.,
By A Customer
This review is from: How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents (Plume Contemporary Fiction) (Paperback)
There is a point on the first chapter when Yolanda's husband ask her what language did she love in. This was the point I knew this book was going to be a very personal experience. Coming from a Hispanic country to worked in the United States, it never ocurred to me that to live and love was also going to be part of the experience. Reading this book was like talking to the friend that went on the same trip as you, only the week before. Amazing how looking into somebody's soul can help you understand your own...
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A truly enjoyable book - fun!,
By A Customer
This review is from: How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents (Hardcover)
I was first drawn to this book because the author is a female Latin-American writer. I have read some male authors (Marquez for one) and was completely swept away. But still I wished for a female perspective.It would be unfair to compare "How the Garcia Girls.." with "A Thousand Years of Solitude" head to head because Ms. Alvarez is not attempting to write a saga or a great(long) novel here. Her stories are to be eaten like M&M's, singly or in a hnadful. Ms. Alvarez's style is emminently readable. And the stories are quite engaging. I think it is a mistake to ask this to be a "novel" in the traditional sense. Many of the chapters first appeared as short stories and stand on their own. As a collection, they are like thumbing backwards through a photo album where we stop and relive/experience the story behind a moment. If I have any criticism of this book is that I didn't feel I got to know each sister equally well, or rather, as well as I would have liked. But all in all I felt for the sisters, especially as they grew younger and relished the details of place and custom and family. It seems so personal I felt it must be somewhat autobiographical. I recommend this highly.
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