The Last of the Menu Girls

by Denise Chavez

Paperback, 1986

Status

Available

Call number

PS3553.H346 L3 1986

Publication

Houston : Arte Público Press, 1986.

Description

Rocío Esquibel is a girl growing up in a Southern New Mexico town with her mother and sister. She defines her neighborhood by its trees--the willow, the apricot and the one they call the marking-off tree. Rocio knows she was born in the closet where she and her sister now take turns looking at the picture of Jesus whose eyes light up in the dark. But at night she enters a magical realm, and in her imaginary Blue Room, she can fly. At first she is a mesmerized observer of the lives of older girls and their boyfriends, but as she finds a job at the local hospital, and discovers a passion for drama and stories, Rocio begins to make her own choices in love and work. Alive with the taste of tamales and the lyrical tang of the Esquibels' talk, The Last of the Menu Girls becomes a rich celebration of Chicano culture, and a universal story of finding one's way in the world.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member AngelaLam
A beautifully written though tedious book about a young woman's coming of age in Texas and New Mexico. I admire the writing and wish I had the talent to emulate Chavez's words. The book was tedious because it had no plot. That is the only complaint I seem to have nowadays with literary writing.
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Some of it is good, with a steady handle on story, but some of it lacks the glue that would otherwise make it memorable.
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Language

Original publication date

1986

Physical description

190 p.; 8.4 inches

ISBN

0934770468 / 9780934770460

Local notes

OCLC = 696
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