The Dirty Girls Social Club: A Novel

by Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 0312313829 Global Overview for this book
Registered by JennyC1230 of Woodstock, Georgia USA on 4/10/2008
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2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by JennyC1230 from Woodstock, Georgia USA on Thursday, April 10, 2008
If you have found this book, welcome to Bookcrossing and thank you for taking the time to let us know about its journey. Feel free to enjoy the book and pass it along to a friend, neighbor, family member or co-worker, or simply leave it somewhere for another lucky reader to enjoy as you did! This book isn’t your type of read? No problem, don't feel obliged to read it, just be kind enough to help it on its journey.

Book Description:

The Dirty Girls Social Club closely resembles Terry McMillan's Waiting to Exhale: a handful of young women seek real love and job satisfaction. Unlike McMillan, Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez has completely thrown out any literary pretensions whatsoever, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. Dirty Girls is a fun, easy, ultimately charming read, not least because the girls themselves are so appealing. Six Latina women become fast friends at Boston University and thereafter meet as a group every few months. Now in their late twenties, they're each on the cusp of the life they want. The novel is narrated in turn by each woman. Feisty Lauren has a column at the Boston Globe, but can't help falling for losers; ghetto-elegant Usnavys is trying to find a man to match her own earning power and expensive tastes; uptight Rebecca is a successful magazine publisher and an unsuccessful wife; beautiful TV anchor Elizabeth has a secret; Sara leads a Martha-Stewart-perfect life as a homemaker; and Amber is a hopeful rock musician in L.A.

The novel works because Valdes-Rodriguez has compassion for her characters; each is faulted, but none is culpable. She also has an eye for the telling detail, as when Rebecca tries to befriend her white husband's stuffy family: "His sister took step classes with me and we shopped for clothes together on Newbury Street and went to the Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum one afternoon with Au Bon Pain sandwiches in our handbags." Something about those sandwiches makes the whole enterprise seem more poignant. On the down side, Valdes-Rodriguez is so eager to make things work out for her ladies, her writing sometimes beggars belief. Men actually say things like "Swear to me you're happily married, and I'll stop pursuing you." Yes, Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez is, in fact, the Latina Terry McMillan. That is, if McMillan were a slighty guiltier pleasure.

Journal Entry 2 by JennyC1230 from Woodstock, Georgia USA on Sunday, May 25, 2008
I really had no expectations when I found this book at a thrift store. I thought it looked like interesting chick-lit. I was thinking Bridget Jones, but it was a bit more emotionally intense than that! I liked this book even if it wasn't as light and fluffy as I thought it would be. It sounds like a cliche, but I laughed and I cried. It was sort of like Sex and the City - Latina style. :-)

I will have to look for more books by this author.

Journal Entry 3 by JennyC1230 from Woodstock, Georgia USA on Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Putting into princess-peapod's Spring Cleaning Bookbox.

Enjoy!

Journal Entry 4 by ninkasi from Nashville, Tennessee USA on Tuesday, June 10, 2008
I caught this book in princess-peapod's Spring Cleaning Bookbox. This looks like an interesting read for the summer!

Thanks JennyC1230!

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