The Barbarian Nurseries: A Novel
by:
Héctor Tobar (author)
Winner of the California Book Award for FictionA Los Angeles Times Bestseller Best Book of the Year ListsThe New York Times Book Review • Los Angeles TimesSan Francisco Chronicle • The Boston Globe Scott and Maureen Torres-Thompson have always relied on others to run their Orange County home. But...
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Winner of the California Book Award for FictionA Los Angeles Times Bestseller Best Book of the Year ListsThe New York Times Book Review • Los Angeles TimesSan Francisco Chronicle • The Boston Globe Scott and Maureen Torres-Thompson have always relied on others to run their Orange County home. But when bad investments crater their bank account, it all comes down to Araceli: their somewhat prickly Mexican maid. One night, an argument between the couple turns physical, and a misunderstanding leaves the children in Araceli’s care. Their parents unreachable, she takes them to central Los Angeles in the hopes of finding Scott’s estranged Mexican father---an earnest quest that soon becomes a colossal misadventure, with consequences that ripple through every strata of the sprawling city. Héctor Tobar's The Barbarian Nurseries is a masterful tale of contemporary Los Angeles, a novel as alive as the city itself.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781250013798 (1250013798)
ASIN: 1250013798
Publish date: 2012-09-04
Publisher: Picador
Pages no: 432
Edition language: English
Category:
Novels,
Literature,
Cultural,
Book Club,
Adult Fiction,
American,
Literary Fiction,
Adult,
Contemporary,
Latin American,
Fiction
And it's not just because I'm from Whittier, and that Whittier is referenced throughout the book. This book was a very, well, fun read. Yes, it was edgy, but always fascinating - even when portions became too wordy. I'm sure as heck recommending it.
I took a break from reading Buddenbrooks, Thomas Mann's early 20th Century tome about the collapse of an German family, to read about a modern Californian family's demise. Because we live in a time of hyper-descent, it takes the Torres-Thompson family less than a decade to accomplish what Buddenbroo...
The Barbarian Nurseries is a huge book. Not in pages, but in conflicts and themes. Aricela, the Mexican illegal and her employers, the Torres-Thompson's are symbols of the great divide.Hector Tobar plants these characters in a McMansion in arid, sun drenched California. The economy has changed and S...