In a misguided attempt to impress her friends, Margot took
her father’s credit card and ran up $2600 in charges. Now, to pay it off, she has to spend the
summer working at her family’s grocery store in the Bronx. She hates the place and everyone there thinks
she’s a stuck-up princess (which she sort of is). But she
thinks she can survive the summer (and hide the shame from the girls at school whom she is
trying to impress).
But just when she feels like she's working things out, an annoying boy from the neighborhood has a habit of
showing up her hypocrisies. And with everything going
on around her, Margot is struggling to keep things together. The store is missing money. Her father and her brother are acting weird. And the
neighborhood is changing too – gentrification threatens the community and the
family store may not survive.
Sassy and trendy, with a firm grasp on urban argot, Rivera
captures the setting well. But that
color aside, she also builds a great story full of vivid characters. There are so many things going on in the
story that people can pretty choose whatever they want. My own choice was to latch on to the socioeconomic tensions between the rich white world of her Margot's prep school and her family’s
roots in the (poorer) world of the South Bronx, and her valiant struggle to bridge that gap.