Angie Cruz is the author of the novels Soledad, Let It Rain Coffee, and Dominicana, which was shortlisted for the Women's Prize and a Good Morning America Book Club pick. She is founder and editor in chief of Aster(ix), a literary and arts journal, and is an associate professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh.
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book - Reviewed on the Front
Cover
A New York Times Editor's Choice
A Best Book of the Year (The New York Times, The Washington Post,
BookRiot, Amazon)
A Latino Book Awards Gold Medal Winner
Finalist for the Aspen Words Literary Prize
Finalist for the Neustadt International Prize for Literature
Longlisted for the Joyce Carol Oates Prize
A Goodreads Choice Award for Fiction Nominee
A Most Anticipated Book (The New York Times, The Washington Post,
Good Morning America, The TODAY Show, Real Simple, Oprah Daily,
BookRiot, Bustle, The Millions, PopSugar, AV Club, LitHub, Ms.
Magazine, AARP, Kirkus Reviews, Katie Couric Media, Brit + Co)
"Taut and poignant...Luckily for us, Cara is an
oversharer...drawing us in with her magnetic storytelling and
breezy self-confidence...In projecting Cara's voice, Cruz
prioritizes the importance of seeing an individual's humanity even
within the most impersonal of systems...Like the novel itself, Cara
resists classification. More than a job, or a cure, she requires a
patient audience with whom she can share her most intimate
secrets."
--The New York Times Book Review (cover review) "How Not to Drown
in a Glass of Water will have you laughing line after line, even
when you wonder if you should be. (The answer is always yes!) By
the time her sessions are up, though, you'll feel like many of
those who know Ms. Romero; that her incessant chatter has become as
life-sustaining as the substance she can't stop drinking...Cruz
never misses. Her new novel aims for the heart, and fires."
--Los Angeles Times "An ode to human connection...The story, told
in Cara's unfailingly frank, sometimes hilarious, voice, quickly
expands like the bellows of an accordion...Cruz once again offers a
fresh glimpse of immigration, womanhood, aspiration and
gentrification...Cara is a character to love...How Not to Drown in
a Glass of Water delivers a sense of the enduring worth of
relationships, life experiences and determination as currencies in
a difficult world."
--The Washington Post
"[I] fell head-over-heels with the protagonist...Cara is warm,
resilient, revealing and unintentionally funny. Remarkably, over
the course of the novel, she arrives at believable
self-realization, understanding that she is not a saint and
accepting the role she has played in some of her misfortunes. By
the book's end, I wanted to sit at Cara's kitchen table and eat her
famous pastillas (made without raisins because she hates
them)."
--San Francisco Chronicle "What a joy to immerse myself in this
elegantly compact, impactful, and vibrant novel...Cruz engages with
weighty issues of gentrification, poverty, globalization and its
displacements, discrimination, bureaucratic cluelessness to the
rich interior life of its petitioners with a touch so light, and a
voice so pitch-perfect that the issues leave the world of
abstraction and become palpable, penetrating, and deeply felt."
--Julia Alvarez, LitHub "This isn't just the best of the year for
me but one of the best of my life reads, too...This is one of those
rare books that finds a way to be deeply funny, real, poignant, and
then lives with you after you're finished. Cara is such a deeply
rich character I felt that I'd known her all my life."
--BookRiot "[A] modern-day hero...Told through Cara's sessions with
a job counselor, this relatable story shows what true resilience
looks like."
--Real Simple "Cruz paints a nuanced portrait of a woman's
introspections on her life and a critical snapshot of the rapidly
shifting terms of American life."
--PopSugar "Cruz's latest novel blazes with brilliance, from its
first-person character development to its structure to its
deliciously slow reveals...You can't help but root for Cara."
--AV Club "[An] intimate tale...Cara's life unspools as we learn
about her life and relationships in this creative novel."
--Good Morning America "How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water is
unlike anything you've read this year."
--Bustle "Hilarious and immersive."
--Oprah Daily "Big Neapolitan-novels-meets-Topics-of-Conversations
vibes...I can't wait to fall into this one."
--LitHub "Brilliantly illustrat[es] the importance of telling one's
story."
--Ms. Magazine "Cruz brings us Cara Romero, a Spanish-speaking
immigrant in her mid-50s who's lost her factory job. Over 12
sessions with her job counselor she recounts her poignant story,
with humor."
--AARP "Cara's voice is direct and full of personality. We can hear
her talking to us throughout the book and turning these pages is
like being invited into a neighbor's kitchen for a good gossip
session...Cruz has created an unforgettable character in Cara. And
readers will feel like they've made a new, fascinating friend."
--New York Journal of Books "Cara delves into love affairs, debt,
gentrification, and what drove her and her estranged son apart.
Faced with secrets and darkness from her past, Cruz writes a woman
who still has plenty of fight left in her."
--Brit + Co "With wit and warmth, author Cruz explores Cara's
[life]. The potency of Cara's first-person voice as she speaks to
the job counselor is undeniable...A poignant portrait of one
fallible, wise woman and a corner of one of New York's most vibrant
immigrant communities."
--Kirkus Reviews
"[Cruz] channels Cara's warm voice...Cara shines as a caring friend
and a survivor thanks to support systems that transcend family
ties."
--Booklist "A tender and quintessentially American portrait."
--Publishers Weekly "An absolute masterpiece--where to begin? I
could tell you about this novel's innovative structure, its
riveting story, its glorious and hilarious voice, its satisfactions
as a page-turner, or its exquisite poetics that draw on immigrant
brilliance. I could tell you it's a stunning exploration of
survival, queerness, family, resilience, and the possibilities
forged by love. All of that is true. This book is a miracle;
prepare to be astonished."
--Carolina De Robertis, author of Cantoras and The President and
the Frog
"Absolutely gorgeous. I'm head over heels in love with and moved by
Cara Romero. This book is full full full, holding so much life with
an effervescent light touch. One of my favorite books I have read
in years."
--Quiara Alegria Hudes, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and
screenwriter of In the Heights "Angie Cruz's luminous new novel
introduces us to the irresistible Cara Romero. An older immigrant
worker whose life was upended by the recession of 2008, she offers
up a funny, smart, engaging handbook to survival (work, love,
children, familia) in a crazily changing world. Personally, I think
Cara should have her own talk show!"
--Cristina Garcia, author of Dreaming in Cuban "Continuously
surprising...Stupendous. The voice comes alive with such immediacy
in this formally inventive novel. I loved every page of it."
--Idra Novey, author of Those Who Knew "Poignant and lovely and
wonderful. I read it in one sitting and will read it again. Angie
Cruz is a genius."
--Jennifer Croft, Man Book International-winning translator and
author of Homesick "So good. Wow. I've laughed so much already.
Cara is hands down becoming one of my favorite characters. This is
a page-turner for sure."
--Saraciea Fennell, editor of Wild Tongues Can't Be Tamed "Write
this down: Cara Romero is going to steal your heart. Such a
beautiful, funny, tender, and empowering story. And what a nuanced
portrayal of motherhood."
--Cleyvis Natera, author of Neruda on the Park "You will love, yes,
love and identify with this brilliantly written story. We are all
Cara Romero."
--Kianny Antigua, award-winning translator of Dominicana
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