Graduate from Harvard and you have it made. The world is your oyster... your future's so bright you gotta wear shades. You are seen as the cream of the crop, the brightest of the bright.
Catalina Ituralde is in her last year at Harvard. She is not your typical undergraduate, thoughâ there is very little typical about her. She is an orphan from Ecuador, undocumented, and being raised by her undocumented grandparents. Having arrived here at a very young age, she has always felt an outsider, seen as an "other." Her grades have propelled her into Harvard, but an uncertain future beyond graduation has her overwhelmed at times. From outside it seems she has won life's lottery; a Cinderella story of a poor immigrant girl who is living the American dream. Inside, she often feels immobilized by the high expectations everyone has set for her.
Catalina does not remain a victim. She understands she is living with the ultra-privileged and refuses to be intimidated. She is attracted to the good-looking Nathaniel Wheeler, the son of a famous film director. She even fantasizes about a life with him, that people will say she found "a good man." She quickly rejects this trap at their romantic peak. "He fell asleep on top of me. I was too young to have men fall asleep on top of me." She kisses him and sneaks across to a Denny's, "desperate to do something I could not take back."
The sudden threat of the deportation of her grandparents abruptly brings Catalina's focus beyond campus walls. Even as she makes a stand to save her family, she finds herself being used as a liberal cause, a curiosity. This will not stand.
Karla Cornejo Villavicencio is one of Harvard's first undocumented graduates. This is her first novel, following the success of her nonfiction "The Undocumented Americans." There is obviously a lot drawn from her life experiences, but she has succeeded in creating a bold, fearless woman who refuses to be confined by the expectations of others.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
Catalina Ituralde is in her last year at Harvard. She is not your typical undergraduate, thoughâ there is very little typical about her. She is an orphan from Ecuador, undocumented, and being raised by her undocumented grandparents. Having arrived here at a very young age, she has always felt an outsider, seen as an "other." Her grades have propelled her into Harvard, but an uncertain future beyond graduation has her overwhelmed at times. From outside it seems she has won life's lottery; a Cinderella story of a poor immigrant girl who is living the American dream. Inside, she often feels immobilized by the high expectations everyone has set for her.
Catalina does not remain a victim. She understands she is living with the ultra-privileged and refuses to be intimidated. She is attracted to the good-looking Nathaniel Wheeler, the son of a famous film director. She even fantasizes about a life with him, that people will say she found "a good man." She quickly rejects this trap at their romantic peak. "He fell asleep on top of me. I was too young to have men fall asleep on top of me." She kisses him and sneaks across to a Denny's, "desperate to do something I could not take back."
The sudden threat of the deportation of her grandparents abruptly brings Catalina's focus beyond campus walls. Even as she makes a stand to save her family, she finds herself being used as a liberal cause, a curiosity. This will not stand.
Karla Cornejo Villavicencio is one of Harvard's first undocumented graduates. This is her first novel, following the success of her nonfiction "The Undocumented Americans." There is obviously a lot drawn from her life experiences, but she has succeeded in creating a bold, fearless woman who refuses to be confined by the expectations of others.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.