How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents by Julia Alvarez: Book Cover

    How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents by Julia Alvarez

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: December 16, 2009
    • 304pp
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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: December 16, 2009
      • Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
      • Format: Paperback, 304pp

      Synopsis

      Julia Alvarez's brilliant first book of fiction sets the Garcia girls free to tell their irrepressibly intimate stories about how they came to be at home -- and not at home -- in America.

      "A warm, honest rendering of family life." --Elle Magazine

      "She has beautifully captured the threshold experience of the new immigrant." --New York Times Book Review

      Annotation

      It's a long way from Santo Domingo to the Bronx, but if anyone can go the distance, it's the Garcia girls. Four lively latinas plunged from a pampered life of privilege on an island compound into the big-city chaos of New York, they rebel against Mami and Papi's old-world discipline and embrace all that America has to offer.

      Publishers Weekly

      The chronicle of a family in exile that is forced to find a new identity in a new land, these 15 short tales, grouped into three sections, form a rich, novel-like mosaic. Alvarez, whose first fiction this is, has an ear for the dialogue of non-natives, and the strong flavors of Dominican syntax and cultural values permeate these pages. Many parallels may be drawn between these stories and Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club. Central to both are young, first generation American females in rebellion against their immigrant elders, and in both books the stories pile up with layers of multiple points of view and overlapping experiences, building to a sense of family myths in the making. The four Garcia daughters, whom we meet as adults but then re-encounter as children as the narrative flows backward in time, are accustomed to a prestigious perch in Spanish Caribbean society. But political upheavals force Papi and Mami to seek refuge in a more modest way of life in the Bronx, and their little girls become transplants who thrive and desire a far bigger embrace of this new world than the elder Garcias can contemplate or accept. This is an account of parallel odysseys, as each of the four daughters adapts in her own way, and a large part of Alvarez's Gar cia's accomplishment is the complexity with which these vivid characters are rendered. (May)

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      Biography

      With her vivid tales of growing up between the two disparate cultures of the Dominican Republic and the United States, Julia Alvarez has drawn comparisons to writers ranging from Jane Austen to Gabriel García Márquez. However, its is Alvarez's fresh, vivid voice that sets her apart, and speaks to fans from both cultures.

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      Customer Reviews

      Nice Storyby AthaliaStoneback

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      November 11, 2009: I thought this was a great story about four girls, working backwards from adulthood in the United States to childhood in the Dominican Republic, before exile. Alvarez spends equal time on each character, so the reader can relate easily to each one. One aspect of the story that I have to criticize is that at first it seemed like beach reading, but once I got into the story, it was very enjoyable and intellectually stimulating.

      A nice readby Anonymous

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      January 04, 2009: How the García Girls lost their Accents was surprisingly good. The first chapter or so is confusing with meeting all the characters, but once you get the main characters straight it is enjoyable. The book is about a family from the Dominican Republic who have to leave the Dominican because their father is in trouble with the government. You hear all about the girls becoming Americanized, and how they grow up through out the book. The book is in reverse chronological order, with the beginning of the novel 1989-1972, and the last part of the book 1960-1956. We follow the girls as they grow up in the United States, and go to college, and start families. It was very interesting to see how boys were favored to have in the Dominican. ?How obnoxious for him to go on and on like that while beside him stood his little granddaughter, wide-eyed and sad at all the things her baby brother, no bigger than one of her dolls, was going to be able to do just because he was a boy.? It was also interesting to see the government type in the Dominican during the 1960?s. ?But Papi is not playing a game now because soon after he runs by in hide-and-seek, the doorbell rings, and Chucha lets in those two creepy-looking men. What catches Yoyo?s eye are their holster belts and the shiny black bulge of their guns poking through.? Overall, this was a really great book, and I recommend it to anyone.


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