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Welcome to LA? Nineties' Hollywood gets an Italian makeover in this poignant and ruefully funny coming-of-age novel featuring a teenage girl who's on shaky ground in more ways than one. Mere weeks after the 1992 riots that laid waste to Los Angeles, Eugenia, a typical Italian teenager, is rudely yanked from her privileged Roman milieu by her hippieish filmmaker parents and transplanted to the strange suburban world of the San Fernando Valley. With only the Virgin Mary to call on for guidance as her parents struggle to make it big, Hollywood fashion, she must navigate her huge new public high school, complete with Crips and Bloods and Persian gang members, and a car-based environment of 99-cent stores and obscure fast-food franchises and all-night raves. She forges friendships with Henry, who runs his mother's movie memorabilia store, and the bewitching Deva, who introduces her to the alternate cultural universe that is Topanga Canyon. And then the 1994 earthquake rocks the foundations not only of Eugenia's home but of the future she'd been imagining for herself.
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I realized while reading this coming-of-age novel that I'm sort of tired of reading coming of age novels. No fault of the author...it was more a realization that as a 25 year old, anxiously/patiently reading about 16 year olds discovering sex as a substitute for self esteem, then realizing that they have choice, then finding things that make them feel confident and true, etc. etc, and following this all the way until they're college-aged--this isn't that thought provoking or enjoyable anymore.
This story was well done! It was interesting to read about an Italian family moving into a dry, wired, sort of messed up town outside of Hollywood.