ARC - out in September 2019
This would make for a great middle school or early high school discussion for a book club or class.
A Dear Diary young adult novel about a young-for-her-age tween named Julia living between Juárez, México and el Paso, Texas. Her Bis (bisabuela; great-grandmother) is wise and loving even when she's suffering from dementia. Her mamá is obsessed with her papá and deeply codependent. Her papá takes on a new job that she and her brother are vague about, but their tía does not approve of. For awhile, there's money and freedom. But soon, he's gone longer and longer, mamá becomes paranoid and distant, and the freedom of the money becomes a gilded cage becomes a cage. All the while, Julia is trying to navigate her tween years: boys, friends, makeup, school.
Because Julia is relatively naive and sheltered, the author is able to use her to help explain some of what's happening: Mexican politics, relationships, family, a friend's imprisoned father. The downside to this great teaching mechanism is that it leaves Julia a relatively blank slate, and made it difficult for me to develop any emotional investment in her.
The book captures a time and a place at a borderland, and what it is for a family to live on both sides of a border, two towns in plain view of each other separated by an enforced but ultimately imaginary line. For that alone, it's an important YA book.
My favourite parts of the book were exchanges between Julia and her papá's best friend, Pedro - several laugh out loud moments - and between Bis, Julia and her hermanito Willy. I also learned how to use "pinche" properly, and recall that cursing in foreign languages was very attractive to me when I was a tween and teenager, so that may be of additional interest to tween and teenage readers.