Nayeli is a young woman who works in a taqueria in Tres Camarones, a coastal village in Mexico too
poor to be of interest to most people, attacting a few surfers occasionally. But
then the village's remoteness and its lack of men (almost all of whom have gone
north to the US) makes it appealing to those involved in the drug trade. With
the help of two friends and her entertaining and spunky aunt Irma, Tres
Camarones' new mayor, Nayeli concocts a plan to reclaim the village from the
criminals. After seeing the movie The Magnificent Seven, Nayeli knows she must
go to the US and find seven men to come back to Tres Camarones and defend the
people. But this quest is more than just a public service to her village, Nayeli
hopes to find her father who has long since disappeared into the US and to bring
him home where he belongs.
When Nayeli and her two friends set off on
their noble quest, the story really starts cooking along. The girls' travels
through Mexico are vivid and not uneventful. After all, what is a noble quest
without windmills to overcome? Unfortunately for the girls, the windmills are
very often not of their imagining but instead real obstacles to their goal.
Getting into the US is not easy and the irony of the matter is that once they
are there as illegal immigrants, it will also be illegal for them to try and get
back into Mexico. But first they must find seven men who are willing to return
with them and then to take back their town.
The characters in the book
are vividly written and just plain fun. They are real and entertaining and funny
and a delight to spend time reading about. The tone of the book stays fairly
light despite the deep and heavy themes of perseverance, illegal immigration,
discrimination, poverty, and bravery. But it is this very lightness that allows
the reader to think clearly about these loaded political and emotional issues.
There is humor galore here and I read much of the book with a smile. Nayeli's
strength is apparent to all but herself and she is a totally engaging and
appealing main character. A well-constructed, beautifully paced novel, this is a
great reading group choice, the adventure and the balanced look at life for
illegals in the US make it eminently discussable as well.