

This 2021 publication is one I read about in a Sunday edition of The Houston Chronicle. It took weeks to get it from our Alvin Library, but it was worth the wait. The book deals with the Mexican American experience in Los Angeles and rebuts the old saying, “It’s always seventy-two and sunny in LA.” The Alvarado family is one with engaging characters; the reader begins to care about them early on as they go about their “messy lives.”
The story begins during a drought, keenly observed by weather-obsessed Oscar, who is the family’s patriarch. Kelia, his wife of many years, is a sculptress who creates erotic statues and sells them in a gallery in Mexico City. Their daughters, Claudia, a TV chef; Olivia, and architect; and Patricia, who is caught up in social media and lives at home with her son round out the cast of characters/family. Escandon, the author, demonstrates “quick wit and humor,” and once this reader realized it was ok to laugh at the absurdness of the family’s lives, she appreciated the total “badness” of the daughters, husbands, lovers who are very comical. One never knows what to expect from the twists and turns of the plot and leaves the reader thinking, “What next!?!”




Borrowed this meme from Deb Nance’s READERBUZZ. If you haven’t checked out her blog, do so; it’s a treat!


That’s all for today, Wednesday, September 29th KEEP ON READING, and enjoy!
RAE

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