Sunday, March 4, 2012

Sofi Mendoza's Guide to Getting Lost in Mexico



Picture retrieved from http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/563483.Sofi_Mendoza_s_Guide_to_Getting_Lost_in_Mexico

Chapter Book: Yes      Genre: Realist Fiction

Alegria, M. (2007). Sofi mendoza’s guide to getting lost in mexico. New York: Simon Pulse. ISBN-13: 978-0-689-87811-4. $8.99.

     The book Sofi Mendoza’s Guide to Getting Lost in Mexico, is about a young lady who was born in America to Mexican parents. All of her life she was raised as an American. While in high school she falls head over heels in love with a white boy named Nick. All she could think of was that when they finished school, they would get married, have the American dream and live happily ever after.  During the last days of her senior year in high school she and a group of friends decided to go to Mexico to party to celebrate before their graduation. Of course Nick would be there, so against her parents’ wishes and her better judgment she just had to go, but while in Mexico she discovers that Nick does not feel the same way, so Sofi and her friends decide to leave early. On their way back home to America, when they get to the boarder she discovers that her green card is a fake document and that she must stay in Mexico with her relatives and that is where her journey begins.
     The author Malin Alegria, wrote this story based on the real-life story of Martha and Carmelia Luna from Santa Paula, California. They were denied reentry into the United States after visiting TJ for an afternoon (p. vii).  Sofi Mendoza’s Guide to Getting Lost in Mexico takes place in San Inocente, California. The story begins with Sofi being the typical teen feeling as if her parents are too strict, they do not understand her and as soon as she graduates from high school she is leaving home going to live on campus at USC where she will be able to do whatever she wants. Her parents are hardworking Mexicans who left Mexico a long time ago in search of fulfilling the American dream for themselves and their daughter. After disobeying her parents Sofi realizes that she may have to spend the rest of her life with her relatives in Mexico. Just as Cinderella has universal application, the same is true for the Wizard of Oz. In the story the Wizard of Oz, Dorothy felt as if she was trapped in Kansas but after being in the world all alone she realized that there was no place like home.

     There were no illustrations in Sofi Mendoza’s Guide to Getting Lost in Mexico however; the author was very vivid in her story telling. I thought the book was very well written and it captured my total attention. I would highly recommend this book for teens ages 14 and above. While reading Sofi Mendoza’s Guide to Getting Lost in Mexico, the ups and downs and struggles Sofi’s family faced in their quest to find the American dream, reminded me of a book I am reading called The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabelle Wikerson. It is an epic story about the migration of black families from the South to the North. One of the greatest stories ever told about how people left one part of America with nothing to live out the American dream and actually accomplished their goal.
See pictures of the characters from Amazon’s website.


No comments:

Post a Comment