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Book Reviews of Dixieland Sushi

Dixieland Sushi
Dixieland Sushi
Author: Cara Lockwood
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ISBN-13: 9780743499422
ISBN-10: 0743499425
Publication Date: 5/3/2005
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 101

3.8 stars, based on 101 ratings
Publisher: Downtown Press
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

15 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 293 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I enjoyed this. It was a fast read. Jen Nakamura Taylor grew up in a small southern town, where her half Japanaese heritage always bothered her. She has been "in love" with the same local boy since 4th grade and gets a wedding invitation from her spoiled cousin who is marrying - guess who??? She needs a date for the wedding and ends up taking a co-worker, who she has a crush on. Between the drive to the wedding, the car breaking down, visiting Graceland and seeing the multi Elvis's (Elvii??), the trip itself has her on the verge. She finally arrives to find that her 4th grade boyfriend is showing an interest in her. Loved the wedding!!!

A fast read, good characters, fun book.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 91 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
With a mother who is a Japanese American Southern Belle and a good ole boy daddy named Bubba, how can Jen help but having an identity crisis. Furthermore, she's just found out that her cousin is about to marry the boy back home that Jen first loved. Guess that it's time for a road trip back to the South.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Quick easy read. Brings back funny memories of being a teenager in the 80's.
shainababygirl avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I absolutely adored this novel. It's funny, it's quirky, you fall in love with the characters, and if you're from the south, you'll end up rolling around laughing. It was an easy, quick read that I thouraghly enjoyed!
lovestory avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
There were many times that I laughed out loud while reading this book, because, as a Southerner, it's amusing to read things and understand their quirks, if only because you live that way, too. :) And I thought Riley was fecthing! Haha.

Still, as a previous poster said, I felt like the dialogue kept repeating itself - especially the parts where the mother and grandmother kept saying "Ya-shee!" or something to that effect. It was funny, and it did add to the character of the book, but after awhile I was wondering if that's all the mother knew to say at times.

It was an enjoyable read and very quick! You can start it by midday and finish it like two hours later.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 313 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Jen Nakamara Taylor didn't have a conventional childhood. In her hometown of Dixieland, Arkansas, most girls' mothers didn't serve sushi at their tenth birthday parties. As a television producer living in Chicago, she thinks she's left her childhood insecurities behind. Then she receives an invitation to the marriage of her grammar-school crush to her beauty-queen cousin.

The subsequent search to find a suitable date, eventful trip back South, and the riotous wedding are all hilarious, but the real appeal of this book lies in its portrayal of a woman confronting her past and embracing her present. Each chapter begins with a platitude from The Karate Kid's Mr. Miyagi, and every other chapter weaves in scenes from Jen's childhood. It seems odd at first, but helps reveal the character's quirky sensibilities. Lockwood is half-Japanese herself, and here she ably and humorously depicts the struggle to fit in.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on
Helpful Score: 1
Fun story, quick read.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A quick and funny read if you are looking for something light. This would be great for lying out by the pool.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 82 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Very good book. Entertaining.
jedshwake avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Such a great light read! Laugh out loud funny!
tashafan avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 10 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Not being a big fan of books with romantic themes I was not sure if I would like this story, but I enjoyed it tremendously! All of Cara Lockwood's characters are so unique, and I'm sure many of us can relate to the eccentric relatives in her family that the main character is embarrassed by but also loves at the same time. Jen, the main character, must make a journey home to a place she wants to forget, but once she is there she realizes that it is a part of her still, and that makes her who she is. Cara Lockwood is very funny also, I laughed through the whole book! I definitely recommend it!
SFmom avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 9 more book reviews
quick read - cute story!
stevielyn avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 147 more book reviews
I'm not really sure how I feel about this book. At first I didn't really like it. There is a lot of whining in this book and I hate whininig. I did like it but I wasn't in love with it.

Wax on....

Jen Nakamura Taylor thought she left behind her awkward past of growing up half-Japanese, half-white in a small Southern town when she moved north to produce a popular Chicago television show. But when she gets word that her Southern Belle cousin is marrying Kevin Peterson, the very boy Jen loved-with-a-capital-L for years, she realizes she can't run from her past forever. Not only does the news conjure up sticky memories of growing up with a mixed heritage in the South (soy sauce on chicken fried steak, anyone?) but now the very single and very busy Jen has got to find a date for the wedding-a grand affair that could put Scarlett O'Hara to shame.

Wax off....

Riley-Jen's cute British friend from work- seems just the ticket; even his girlfriend thinks it's a good idea. But as Jen and Riley whistle on down to Dixie, sparks start to fly. Add to the fire that grown-up but still charming Kevin Peterson, who appears to have a soft spot for Jen, and, well, whoa. It's going to take everything Jen has (and a lot of help from the Karate Kid-wisdom of her pop culture hero Mr. Miyagi) to survive the meeting of past and present, and of North and Far East and South...where Jen finally learns to come to terms with her heritage, her love life and herself.
reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 34 more book reviews
This is one of those books that you laugh outloud! i really enjoyed it from cover to cover.
VintageNana avatar reviewed Dixieland Sushi on + 28 more book reviews
Really cute book, I enjoyed the authors' characters and the story line.