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Chargement... Sanpakupar Kate Gavino
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Twelve-year-old Marcine and her Lola (grandma) are obsessed with sanpaku, something about the whites of one's eyes indicating the body's imbalance. Marcine devotedly follows the sanpaku diet plan even after Lola passes away, but her faith wobbles in the wake of the murder of Tejano singer Selena and rumors about a revered nun being lesbian. Scenes in the book flow like teenage stream-of-consicousness reminding me of Lynda Barry's keen-eyed Marlys. Self-aware with moments of unexpected humor. ( ) Well, what a jumbled mess. In this coming of age graphic novel, Marcine is a twelve-year-old Catholic Filipino American whose grandmother has told her about a goofy Japanese superstition based on how visible the whites of your eyes are around your iris. Realizing she has the bad amount of sclera showing, Marcine starts a macrobiotic diet recommended by a weird but real book called You Are All Sanpaku by George Ohsawa. (BTW, is anyone else having trouble using the Goodreads "Insert book/author" option?) Gavino starts delving into Catholicism, the Philippines, and shoplifting, which was okay, but then the narrative takes a turn as it introduces the murder of pop star Selena and starts detailing a weird rivalry between Mexican Americans pushing for Selena's elevation to sainthood over the beatification of a fictional Filipino woman named Vilma Vielique de Santa Barbara. Vilma backers out Selena as a Jehovah's Witness, falsely claiming her death was due to her refusal of medical treatment. Then homophobia rears its head as Vilma is denounced as a lesbian by the Selena backers. And then the whole vile thing just kind of fizzles out. Finally there is a school trip that doesn't go particularly well and the book ends. I think the protagonist has some revelations about her own sexuality and the pointlessness of superstitions and religion, but, then again, I'm not really sure and certainly don't care. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
An ominous condition known as Sanpaku plagues the waking life of young Marcine. Marcine is fascinated with the Japanese idea of Sanpaku. It says that seeing the white around the iris of your eyes is a bad omen. But it's everywhere Marcine looks--her grandmother has it, some classmates at Catholic school have it, JFK had it . . . even Marcine might suffer from this odd condition. Eating a strict macrobiotic diet and meditating is supposed to help, but no matter how much Marcine wants it to, it can't save her grandmother, or bring back pop star Selena, or make her life at school any easier. From cartoonist Kate Gavino (Last Night's Reading), Sanpaku gives voice to the insecurities that abound in teens of all cultures, while exploring this Japanese theory through her own Catholic, Filipino background. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)741.5The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, ComicsClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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