[identity profile] anitabuchan.livejournal.com
5. Life isn't all Ha Ha Hee Hee by Meera Syal

I'm a big fan of Meera Syal, so I pretty much knew I would like this. Life Isn't All Ha Ha Hee Hee revolves around three thirty-something British Indian women, Tania, Sunita and Chila. They're about as different as they can be, but all are strong, well-rounded characters. I liked Sunita and Chila very much. Tania, I started off liking most, which then turned to dislike, then pity, before going back to like.

I love Syal's descriptions, which made it easy to imagine this vivid blend of British and Indian culture. It didn't make me laugh out loud, but it was funny - not in a cracking jokes way, just in the observations made about various characters. I also liked the ending very much. I don't want to ruin it, but I was left feeling happy with how the three characters had changed throughout the book.

6. Does My Head Look Big In This? by Randa Abdel-Fattah

Amal has just decided to start wearing the hijab full time. She goes to a posh school and knows that most of the people there will react badly. I didn't like this book as much as I liked her second book (10 Things I Hate About Me), but I still mostly enjoyed it. I liked the characters, I liked the multicultural world Amal lived in. But it wasn't a 'can't put it down' book. I sometimes wondered where the plot was going, or why I was still reading - for a section of the book there was very little suspense. Then something happened that caught my interest again. I think this is a good book in need of a better editor - Abdel-Fattah's a good writer, but this could have been improved.

7. Bindis and Brides by Nisha Minhas

Zarleena, who has recently escaped from an abusive marriage, bumps into a man (Joel) at the supermarket, and agrees to help him cook an Indian meal for his one night stand. Except the reason she does so is that he tells her it's for his fiancee, in order to prove his love. Various misunderstandings ensue, Joel proves himself a good guy after all, they all live HEA (except the abusive ex-husband, of course). I loved the writing style, and found it sometimes very funny. But I also had some serious issues. Spoilers. )
sophinisba: Gwen looking sexy from Merlin season 2 promo pics (william hack rose by semyaza)
[personal profile] sophinisba
Last month I happened to read two novels about women of color working in the homes of white women.

6. BarbaraNeely, Blanche on the Lam, 1992
This is the first in a series of mysteries starring Blanche White, a black woman who works as a maid, struggles to make ends meet, takes care of her kids, and solves crimes! I had heard good things about these books from several places and knew they'd won some big awards. I liked the idea of them, including the fact that Blanche is able to find out as much as she does because the rich white people she works for are so busy ignoring her or treating her as a non-person that they don't think to hide their secrets.

Sad to say, I didn't actually enjoy reading this book. :/ I found the writing plain and most of the characters two-dimensional. I wasn't too interested in the plot either, but then I don't read a lot of mysteries, so someone who's more into those might like it more. Blanche is a very interesting character and like I said, I know a lot of people have liked these books, so, yeah.

8. Wendy Lee, Happy Family, 2008
The narrator of this novel is a young Chinese woman named Hua who's recently moved to New York. After working for a few months at a Chinese restaurant she becomes a babysitter and then full-time nanny for an affluent white couple who have adopted a Chinese baby. Most of the action takes place in the States but there are also flashbacks to her life in China.

All the relationships in this are very complicated and painful and felt very real to me. I really loved Hua's POV, how observant she was about this family and the other white and Chinese-American characters and how different they are from her as a woman who grew up in China. In particular I thought the relationship between Hua and the adoptive mother Jane was fascinating. Jane hires Hua partly because she wants Lily to have a Chinese role model and educator in her life, and also because Hua reminds her of herself as a young woman who had just moved to New York. Hua has her own ideas about how wrong this Jane's assumptions are but she keeps them to herself. I was not thrilled with where the plot went in the last 30 pages or so, but in general I really enjoyed reading this. Happy Family is Wendy Lee's first novel but I'll be looking for more from her.
[identity profile] onceupon.livejournal.com
Happy Hour at Casa Dracula, by Marta Acosta, is a fun vampire/romance/comedy. Actually, I kind of hate to call it a romance because there is nothing of the explicit sex in this one (though some characters do, thankfully, get it on). Basically, if you are on a smut mission, this is not the book you are looking for. However, it IS clever and delightful on several different levels.

Milagro de Los Santos is a smart and sexy Latina who, in true Regency romance style, can't seem to get her shit together especially in the man department. She's a product of a fancy pants college education but it isn't doing her much good in the "real" world.

I actually can't stand to read most Regency romances because the heroine is so passive; Milagro is anything but. She has complex relationships with her friends and former lovers. She has a complicated family situation. But none of it feels heavy in this book - it simply is what it is - Milagro isn't going to waste a lot of time moping, she's going to muddle through as best she can.

Nothing more than you'd find on the back of a book jacket, actually. )

The tone shifts between Regency romance and flat-out caper fairly regularly. It keeps the pages turning.

This is not Serious Literature. It's awesome fluff without being dumb.

My biggest complaint is actually the cover. My copy was an ARC with an illustration. But there's something about the actual cover and the cover of the third book (which I haven't read yet) that looks like they chose the most Anglo-Saxon Latina model they could. though that might also be tied in with my irritation at the insistence on representing not-thin characters as no, really, quite thin on book covers (Milagro is one of those not-fat, not-thin characters and her body confidence is actually totally awesome).

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