Photo de l'auteur

Jenny Lombard

Auteur de Drita, My Homegirl

2 oeuvres 617 utilisateurs 15 critiques

Œuvres de Jenny Lombard

Drita, My Homegirl (2006) 604 exemplaires
How to Stay Single Forever (1997) 13 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female
Lieux de résidence
New York, New York, USA
Professions
teacher
writer

Membres

Critiques

Ok, pluses here (there are a lot): alternating viewpoint between Drita's Albanian refugee family and Maxie's New York African American family, who is about 3 years out from the loss of her mother in a car accident. Does a fabulous job on both viewpoints -- the shock and strangeness of a small New York apartment after the sudden exit from Kosova, the fear and despair that Drita's mom succumbs to, the difficulties of many people in a small space just trying to cope. And then Maxie -- who is having a lot of difficulty in her grief, acting out, getting in fights and mischief and seriously having a hard time with her dad's new girlfriend. Her new friendship (assigned to her by a caring teacher) with Drita ends up steadying her. I love that both families have a caring grandmother who lives with them and takes on a lot of the heavy emotional work that lets the families function. I love that the refugee family is white and Muslim and the welcoming American family is black -- and comes through when Drita's mom hits a crisis in a big way -- they are absolutely the heroes in this story, but it's not presented as a story about race, it's a school story about 4th graders. Also, I really like that Drita is talented at basketball.

Minuses -- I did find it a little slow to get into. It's 135 pages, but I feel like most of the action happens in the last 3rd of the book, so there's a little patience required to engage.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jennybeast | 13 autres critiques | Apr 14, 2022 |
This had potential but the characterization felt very forced. It improved as the story went on, but it was hard to overcome the roughness at the beginning of the story.
 
Signalé
michelleannlib | 13 autres critiques | Jul 25, 2017 |
The title really covers it all!

101 short paragraph entries sweetly envelop a variety of often very funny approaches to staying single
and can inspire many conversations about what works and what doesn't for women,
and what other new (from 1996) and creative ideas might then fly out.

It also none-too-subtly lets women know the many possible things that they are currently doing
to turn men off. Straight forward, not mean or backhanded.

Favorites include:

Only Sleep with Men Who are More Screwed-up than You,
Go Into The Arts,
Bring Mom Along,
Wear a Bathing Suit with a Skirt...
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
m.belljackson | Feb 19, 2017 |
Drita is a refugee from war-torn Kosovo, newly arrive in New York City. Maxie is a popular girl with a bit of an attitude. In this short book with chapters alternating from first-person Drita to first-person Maxie, these two unlikely girls become the closest of friends. We also spend time with each family. Maxie, who lives with her father and grandmother, her mother having been killed in a car accident a few years prior, and Drita, whose father struggles to support his family driving a cab, while his engineering degree seems useless in the US, her grandmother, and her mother, who is not handling the transition to a new country well at all.
It's a beautiful story of friendship and families.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
fingerpost | 13 autres critiques | Oct 22, 2016 |

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
617
Popularité
#40,747
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
15
ISBN
12

Tableaux et graphiques