Her best friend Leti ought to have everything going for her. She's an honor student and doing well at school, but now she's also pregnant. Worse, the father is a black kid that Leti's racist parents would never accept in their house. She knows that eventually she'll have to tell her parents, but Leti procrastinates. In their seemingly impossible situations, the two girls struggle to find solutions.
Deftly sifting through a wide array of issues, including child abuse, teen pregnancy, abandonment, prostitution, racism, and poverty, Ixta packs a huge punch into her debut novel about coming of age in East Oakland. Belén herself drove me crazy with her endless series of bad decisions and her stubborn unwillingness to accept help, but I was still captivated enough to hang in there for her. She felt real and in fact really quite beyond my judgement. I won't ever really know what it is like to grow up in Mexican-American household, but this novel opened a portal that allowed me to see it with all the good and the bad. A rich and rewarding story.
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