| From
the colorful cover and trendy title, you might be inclined
to dismiss "The Dirty Girls Social Club" as just another
best-selling chick-lit novel that seems to be all the rage these
days, but you'd be missing out.
"The
Dirty Girls Social Club" is a beach book and it is
topping the bestseller list right now (and the movie rights were
recently optioned by Jennifer Lopez), but it's definitely not like
most of the other summer novels out there.
The
story is about six Latina friends from Boston University
who still get together regularly seven years later:
Sara, Lauren, Rebecca, Usnavys, Amber, and Elizabeth. Besides illustrating
the range of ethnic diversity within the "Latina" category,
the six friends also have very different temperaments and a variety
of careers, including news anchor, public affairs VP for a national
non-profit, magazine publisher, newspaper columnist, singer, and
stay-at-home mom.
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One
thing they all have in common besides their friendship, however,
is secrets that they keep, both from one another and from themselves.
Elizabeth's
secret is that she is a closeted lesbian. A Columbian-born,
born-again Christian who worked her way through
college as a runway model and is now a well-known news anchor in
Boston, Liz is the most beautiful of the friends but confounds them
with her inability to sustain a relationship with a man.
Until
now, Elizabeth hasn't been able to tell them the reason why, since
she has only recently admitted it to herself. She is afraid her
friends will reject her if they find out, not to mention what it
will do to her career. Complicating things further is her new relationship
with a white, butch, out lesbian poet named Selwyn, whom she loves
but doesn't think her friends would approve of:
[Selwyn]
wouldn't make a good impression on them. I'm sure of that. She
is bulky, and she wears plaid flannel shirts and loose-fitting
men's work pants. Her hair is short, and that might please Rebecca,
but she only puts earrings in one ear, and then there are at least
five of them, hard silver hoops. That would not please any of
them. That would send them running for the nearest door. They're
like that. They wouldn't be able to see pas their own misplaced
instincts in order to appreciate Selwyn's eyes. Dark brown, on
fire eyes. Lit up with humor. Lit up with life. She wouldn't make
a good impression. Not on them. But she did on me. She did on
me. She did.
As is to be expected, the secrets tumble out as the novel progresses,
as each woman grapples with challenges in her career, relationship,
and friendships, and Elizabeth's secret is no exception. When she
is outed by a tabloid, she finds that although the impact on her
career is predictably negative, her friends react in unexpected
ways, finally giving her the courage to chart a new course for her
life.
Writing
alternately in the voices of each of the characters, Valdes-Rodriguez
keeps the story engaging and humorous
despite tackling some heavy issues, like racism, homophobia, sexism,
and violence against women.
The
novel succeeds in making its six main characters distinct and well-rounded;
although each of the women have admirable traits, they are also
each flawed in their own way. Valdes-Rodriguez is not subtle in
making her point that Latina women are very diverse, but she does
wrap her message in humor, such as in this passage in the opening
chapter in which Lauren describes her job interview at the newspaper:
With
a name like Lauren Fernandez, they figured [speaking] Spanish
was part of the package. But that's the American disease as I
see it: Rampant, illogical stereotyping. We would not be American
without it. I admit I didn't tell them I was half white trash,
born and raised in New Orleans. My mom's people are bayou swamp
monsters with oil under their fingernails and a rusty olive-green
washing machine in front of the double-wide, the kind of people
you see on Cops, where the guy is skinny as a week-dead kitten,
covered with swastika tattoos and crying because the police blew
up his meth lab. Those are my people. Them and New Jersey Cubans
with shiny white shoes.
"The
Dirty Girls Social Club" is a fun, breezy book that
provides a well-written glimpse into the intersecting lives of six
women who are still trying to make sense of it all. What differentiates
this novel from all the others is its ability to break down stereotypes
about both Latinas and lesbians, which is more than worth a little
heavy-handed preaching here and there.
Amazon.com:
"The
Dirty Girls Social Club"
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