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I loved this heartbreaking tale of two star-crossed teenagers, who find each other in a low-income apartment block filled with immigrants like themselves. Maribel came on the back of a truck with her family from Mexico, in the hopes of a good school which would help Maribel overcome the mental disability she suffers as a result of a childhood accident. Mayor migrated from Panama, and lives in the shadow of his college-going, soccer star of an older brother. Both see something of value in the oth
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(Reread review for my RATWC- December 2024)
Immigration, despite its deeply complex social and political context, is always a core issue of family and everything about this novel highlights that in the sense of what happens to the 10+ characters who are voiced in this story, all living in the same complex in Newark, Delaware and all from different Latin American countries.
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3.5/5 stars
This was my first book read for 2016 and what I nice start it was. I started it at the hairdresser's this morning ...more
Immigration, despite its deeply complex social and political context, is always a core issue of family and everything about this novel highlights that in the sense of what happens to the 10+ characters who are voiced in this story, all living in the same complex in Newark, Delaware and all from different Latin American countries.
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3.5/5 stars
This was my first book read for 2016 and what I nice start it was. I started it at the hairdresser's this morning ...more
"One day when we go back to México and people ask me what it was like here, I will tell them those things. I will tell them all the ways I loved this country."
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I rarely choose to read a book in which a teenager plays an important role, and it isn't far into the story in "The Book of Unknown Americans" before it becomes obvious one is going to do just that. And I tend to like books with fairly strong plots, and this book seemed to be giving me little vignettes of this family and that family and a single here and there. A friend had said "It's wonderful, Bobby, you've got to read it" – and what made me stick to the book in the early stages is that I am a
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The Book of Unknown Americans is a tragedy from the mouths of immigrants. It’s a book about the American Dream and the various ways that dream can fall apart and die. At the center of the novel are two teenagers from Latin American families, but Cristina Henríquez includes other voices as well, and while there are absolutely high points and moments of happiness, the pervading tone I felt while reading was of disappointment and “making do” with poor situations.
I’ve just made this novel sound pret ...more
I’ve just made this novel sound pret ...more
I would have given this book five stars, except I got kind of bored toward the end of the book and I don't think the story fell together well in the end. However, it was very interesting to read about the Latin-American immigration experience.
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Jul 12, 2014
Stephanie
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Aug 10, 2015
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Feb 15, 2017
Elizabeth Norman
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Feb 22, 2018
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