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The Last Karankawas
The Last Karankawas: A Novel | Kimberly Garza
4 posts | 3 read | 2 to read
For fans of Yaa Gyasi and Cristina Henríquez—a kaleidoscopic, emotionally charged debut novel from Kimberly Garza about a tight-knit community of Mexican and Filipino American families on the Texas coast. Welcome to Galveston, Texas. Population 50,241. Carly Castillo has only ever known Albacore Avenue. Abandoned as a child by her Filipina mother and Mexican-American father, Carly returns each morning from her nursing shift to the house she shares with her grandmother, Magdalena. But when Magdalena slips into dementia, Carly begins to imagine a life elsewhere. Jess Rivera, her boyfriend and all-star shortstop turned seaman, treasures the salty, familiar island air. Years ago, he had a chance to leave Galveston for a bigger city with more possibilities. But he didn’t then, and he sure as hell won't now. Deftly moving through these characters’ lives and those of the individuals who circle them—Mercedes, Jess’s undocumented cousin; Kristin, Magdalena’s daytime nurse; Luz, the wife of Carly’s best friend; Schafer, Jess’s coworker out on the gulf—Garza presents a mosaic depiction of everyday survival in Southern Texas. As word spreads of a storm gathering strength offshore, building into Hurricane Ike, they each must make a difficult decision: board up the windows and hunker down, or flee inland and abandon their hard-won home. Unflinching, lyrical, and singular, The Last Karankawas is a portrait of America scarcely witnessed, where browning palm trees and oily waters mark the forefront of ecological change. It is a deeply imagined exploration of familial inheritance, human perseverance, and the histories we assign to ourselves, establishing Kimberly Garza as a brilliant new literary voice.
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Soubhiville
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Pickpick

A collection of snapshots of life for Mexican American and Pilipino Americans in mostly Galveston Texas, this novel moves between characters to weave a community. The way the story built then receded felt rather like a hurricane, inevitable and uncertain at the same time.
It‘s a low pick for me, only because the number of characters made it hard to feel close to any, though elder Magdalena was my favorite.

With one of my first Passion Flowers 🌸

JenniferEgnor Are these your passion flowers? 9mo
Soubhiville @JenniferEgnor yes it‘s the first time I‘ve ever grown them. 🙂 9mo
Cinfhen Beautiful flowers and lovely review!! I‘m still on the fence about this book…#MaybeSomeday 9mo
JenniferEgnor I‘ve always loved them and started to grow my first years ago. When we moved in 2019, I found another, even more beautiful than the one I‘d grown before, with a deep royal purple. It has since spread and new vines pop up everywhere. The first time I ever saw a passion flower, was in a sun flower field—and it was the fruit bearing variety! Happy gardening🌱 9mo
68 likes5 comments
review
Cathyloves2read
Panpan

This book was not for me. It started out so good. Then it went off on this wild tangent that I found very hard to understand. Characters were mentioned in the beginning of the book didn‘t come up again until the end. I had no idea who they were at times. I‘m not sure if the last section was a chapter or a glossary. I did like parts of the story, but as a whole, it‘s not one I‘d recommend. I do thank Goodreads for the ARC.

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swishandflick
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It might be time to buy a lottery ticket! 😂

fredamans Congrats! 2y
tokorowilliamwallace Nice win. I entered this giveaway, too! 2y
65 likes2 comments
review
GerardtheBookworm
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Mehso-so

Good beginning with strong prose incorporating themes of culture, traditions, family, immigration, and social issues focusing on several characters who are of Mexican or Filipino American descent in a small Texas town. However the second half deteriorates with each personal connection and slowly gets bogged down with ambition.