Bodega Dreams: A Novel | Ernesto Quinonez | The best Latino novel
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Bodega Dreams: A N...
Bodega Dreams: A Novel
Ernesto Quinonez
Vintage
, 2000 - 224 pages
average customer review:
based on 109 reviews
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highly recommended
"A new and authentic voice of the urban Latino experience." --Esmeralda Santiago, author of When I Was Puerto Rican
In a stunning narrative combining the gritty rhythms of Junot Diaz with the noir genius of Walter Mosley,
Bodega
Dreams
announces the arrival of a writer who The Village Voice has already hailed as "a Writer on the Verge."
The word is out in Spanish Harlem: Willy Bodega is king. Need college tuition for your daughter? Start-up funds for your fruit stand? Bodega can help. He gives everyone a leg up, in exchange only for loyalty--and a steady income from the drugs he pushes.
Lyric, inspired, and darkly funny, this powerful debut
novel
brilliantly evokes the trial of Chino, a smart, promising young man to whom Bodega turns for a favor. Chino is drawn to Bodega's street-smart idealism, but soon finds himself over his head, navigating an underworld of switchblade tempers, turncoat morality, and murder.
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Bodega dreams.
Living in Spanish Harlem with no money is difficult. Well there's only one person you can ask for help.Willie
Bodega
. The outrageous
novel
Bodega
Dreams
by Ernesto Quinonez is about latin people (Puerto Ricans) living in Spanish Harlem and their experiences. It focuses on how one man trys to help the residents out in exchange for loyalty. Julio Mercado also known as Chino helps Bodega and his partner Nazario.
I loved the way Quinonez used street-smart dialogue. The way the characters talk to eachother in the book, seems like you are hearing them on the street talking in real life. He uses all the curses and slang very realistically.
I recomend this book to guys who are 16 and older because many young men are getting themselves into drugs and businesses with the wrong people. Most of them are hispanics. This book would probably have them guessing what will happen next.
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The best Latino novel
This is the best book with a social conscience written about Latinos. This book should've been an automatic bestseller with a powerful message about seeing the bigger picture in life and a wonderful story. The characters in this are unlike any other and the book contains many twists always making you not want to put it down.
Outstanding
Have you ever seen the movie 'Empire' with John Leguizamo, well this is certainly somewhat like the movie. I couldn't put the book down!! I'm from the Bronx, NYC and this certainly took me back home. All he says in this book is true about growing up in 'the hood'. If you want to learn about the city and how most hispanic people grow up this is the book. What I love the most is that he is a NYC teacher, and it just inspired me more to work towards my dream of inspiring kids in the city.
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The Young Lords meet Jay Gatsby
I read this book for my Contempary American Literature class at SUNY Dutchess in New York.
I must admit that I was completely wrong with my assumption that
Bodega
Dreams
was going to be about an immigrant Mexican struggling while trying to find a piece of the American dream or a family operating a small market in East LA. First of all, it doesn't even take place in LA, but in Spanish Harlem, NY. And although the main characters of the book are in fact Latino, they are Puerto-Rican. The Bodega in the title is not grocery store or an empty room, but a man.
I was almost immediately swept into the world of our beloved protagonist and narrator Chino. The first few pages of Bodega Dreams was great. The author already established his style and I fell in love with his vivid descriptions of upper Manhattan. I grew up in Yonkers, NY, in a similar environment and although I can not relate to the specific struggles of a young Latino, I could definitely understand the surroundings. I have been to East Harlem many times and the author's descriptions of El Barrio are first rate. I noticed this within the first chapters.
A few things bothered me though. I understand the importance of providing information about the past to understand who the characters are as young adults, and although the portrayal of Sapo is awesome, I would have appreciated a better development of Blanca's character and the episodes that surrounded her and Chino eventually getting married. In the beginning of the story she is described as a Pentecostal beauty that every guy wants but can't get, but then, seemingly out of the blue, she and Chino were getting married. Also, it may be different in East Harlem, but where I grew up, unless you were black, you didn't call your friends "nigga" - it just seemed funny to me - but perhaps that is the way the youth talks in Spanish Harlem and it was meant to add to the realism of the story, which is fine with me because I'll take realism and accuracy over "political-correctness" anytime and anyplace - especially in literature! But I also noticed a lot of syntax errors, like the absence of question marks and commas when they were needed. Maybe this was the fault of the editor but never-the-less it was a little annoying.
Despite little flaws like that, the Author's ability to set a mood is superb. I can picture this book becoming a movie, complete in my mind with a pre-picked cast. It has the perfect combinations of over-used cliches (which are not always a bad thing), raw dialogue, interesting characters, and a near perfect narration. I particularly liked the way Round 1 of Book 2 starts with the same few sentences as the beginning of the book, and then adds " - But by now you know that it was always about Bodega."
Quiñonez is writing about a neighborhood he knows; this is obvious when I read the accuracy in all the descriptions. This makes me wonder about how much of his own experiences may have fallen into the pages of this book. How the narrator perceived his educational experiences made me a little uncomfortable though: describing the white teachers as arrogant and racist, and all the Hispanic teachers being so sympathetic to the tribulations of the latin youth.
I also wonder how much of the author's own personal opinions entered into the commentary. Upon some research, I have discovered that the author is the son of a devout Communist. Bodega's dream itself seems to be a neo-Marxist revolution, where crime, violence, and drugs are the forces behind major social rebuilding. The author even uses real examples like "the Young Lords" to reinforce the idealism of his characters and their plans to eventually "free" Puerto Rico from the American commonwealth. Although his name isn't mentioned in the book (for obvious reasons), I wonder how much of these thoughts were inspired by an admiration of Che Gueverra.
Somewhere near the middle of this book the story began to be very familiar. It was when Bodega was seeking to meet Vera that I began to feel like I was reading a modern day Spanish-Harlem version of The Great Gatsby (Gatsby and Daisy). By the end of the book my suspicions were confirmed. Bodega Dreams is, in fact, a mirror of F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic complete with a similiar twist of an ending.
It is a good
novel
though and a grand debut attempt. I look forward to reading more from this author.
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Bodega Dreams
I read this book for an outside reading assignment in my Latin American Studies class. I don't really read a lot of books but i thought this one was ok. It started off to be a little boring. However, towards the middle it got a little bit more interesting. I personally could not relate with any of the characters and the book had a lot of stereotypes. It took place in Spanish Harlem and the three main characters are Willie, Sapo, and Chino. I think it had a good storyline and really made it an interesting read.
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