Sunday, May 17, 2009

Return to Sender by Julia Alvarez


"Tyler looks out the window of his bedroom and can't believe what he is seeing."

The abstract is hidden because it may contain spoilers. If you would like to read the full summary, simply use your cursor to highlight the next few lines and it will magically appear.

Abstract: After his family hires migrant Mexican workers to help save their Vermont farm from foreclosure, eleven-year-old Tyler befriends the oldest daughter, but when he discovers they may not be in the country legally, he realizes that real friendship knows no borders.

Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf; 324 pages

2 comments:

Kris said...

I wanted to really like this, and I did think it was a good story and a marvelous topic; however the letters written by the eldest daughter seemed a little too long and too, ummm, descriptive might be the word I'm looking for...to be believable. It was hard for me to remember I was reading a letter, rather than a narrative section of the book; then, switching back to the narrative was confusing.

Jen said...

I don't think the epistolary technique was well used in this book either; passages were too long and un-letterlike to be truly effective.

I am interested in this topic, though. Some links or additional reading would have been nice at the end of the book.