Books About Antiques - antique-book-store.com
Home Privacy Policy Contact Us
Featured Products
>  Antique Price Guides
>  Antique Cars
>  Antique Furniture
>  Antique Porcelain
>  Antique Pottery
>  Antique Toys
Related Shopping
Antiques Books at Amazon.com
Antiques Books at Powells.com
Antiques Books-BiggerBooks.com
Antiques Books at Rbookshop.com
Antiques Books at Booksamillion
Additional Resources


Domsys.com Safe Shopping Site
       Search ARC Spider:      

Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards))


You have found Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards)) one of the thousands of books about antiques at Antique Book Store. We hope that by offering you a tremendous selection of the books about antiques that you want at incredible prices, you will be back the next time you need anything from Antique Book Store.   We greatly appreciate your patronage and look forward to servicing you again. 
 
You Are Here:  Books About Antiques > Blue Books > Item 98 of 480

Previous item in Blue Books Next item in Blue Books

Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards)) by  Tanuja Desai Hidier
List Price: $16.95
Our Price: $13.56
Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Available from Amazon
Price Last Updated : 7-30-2008
Purchase Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards)) Now Get info on Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards))

Features
  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Scholastic Press; 1st ed edition October 1, 2002
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0439357624
  • ISBN-13: 978-0439357623
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds

    From Publishers Weekly
    In this enlightening first novel, Hidier offers readers an engrossing, personal account of the Indian-American experience through the eyes of an insightful narrator. Dimple Lala, a New Jersey teen interested in photography, has been confused about her identity since she entered the world the "wrong way," causing her mother "twelve treacherous hours of painful labor." Her fascination with photography reveals Dimple's keen sense of perception as well as her role as an observer rather than a participant. "Not quite Indian, and not quite American," Dimple unsuccessfully tries to blend in, riding on the coattails of her blue-eyed, blonde best friend, Gwyn. The author nimbly describes the shared outsider status that drew together the two, "the rich little girl who lived like an orphan and the brown little girl who existed as if she were still umbilically attached to her parents." During Dimple's 17th year, however, the tables suddenly turn when Dimple's parents introduce her to Karsh Kapoor, the son of their close friends from India. Through their meeting, the author reveals Dimple's mother's own secret creative aspirations (to become a dancer in her youth) as well as another first-generation teen's attempt to straddle both cultures. When Gwyn becomes infatuated with Karsh, Dimple helps Gwyn become a suitable girlfriend for him, even as she gradually comes to admire Karsh herself. In the process, the heroine embarks on a journey of self-discovery. On one level, the book explores the growing pains, rebellious phases, peer pressures and first love experienced universally by teens. On a deeper level, it celebrates a harmonious blending of cultures as it traces one adolescent's bumpy trek towards self-actualization. If a few subplots take the main action on a slight detour (e.g., Gwyn's relationship with her high school-cum-college boyfriend, etc.), the sparkling prose will carry readers along. The author seamlessly integrates descriptions of Indian food, dress and customs, often spiced with Dimple's sarcastic commentary. But even as Dimple distances herself from her family's traditions, her sense of respect and genuine affection for her accomplished parents (both doctors) are never far from the surface. The author poetically captures the essence of her characters and the richness of seemingly insignificant moments. Absorbing and intoxicating, this book is sure to leave a lasting impression. Ages 13-up.
    Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

    From School Library Journal
    Grade 9 Up-Dimple Lala has spent her entire life trying to fit in. In India, she is too American, while in America she feels unable to conform, largely because of her parents' efforts to educate and involve her in Indian culture. By her 17th birthday, she feels incapable of making anyone happy and is hopelessly confused as to where she belongs. Her parents are unhappy about her obsession with photography and her dating activities, while Dimple herself feels that her best friend, Gwyn, is either ignoring her for a new boyfriend or trying to usurp Dimple's family. Her parents come up with what they think is a perfect solution-they introduce her to Karsh, a suitable boy. Dimple is turned off at the thought. Just when she is sure that things can't get more complicated, she meets him again, now involved in activities that would render him completely unsuitable to her parents but that interest her. By this time Gwyn decides that he seems like the perfect boyfriend for her and Dimple ends up with a number of tricky situations. This involving story, filled with detail about the protagonist's life and background, will reward its readers. The family background and richness in cultural information add a new level to the familiar girl-meets-boy story. Teens will be rooting for Dimple and her quest to find her own place in her family and country.
    Betsy Fraser, Calgary Public Library, Canada
    Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

    Reader Reviews
    This book is a rare treat, in that it presents the life of a typical American teenager with an atypical life, is honest, but doesn't stoop to cliches and stereotypes to tell its tale. This is the story of Dimple Lala, a young woman, born and raised in New Jersey of Indian immigrant parents, who is turning 17 at the beginning of summer. Dimple rejects her parents old-world culture and wants to be an All-American girl, but everyone else sees her as Indian. For her parents, Dimple getting drunk once while out with friends on her birthday is cause for a silent treatment and punishment of international proportions. In one of my favorite lines from the book, Dimple's mother says, "Giving birth to you was easy. It is now that I am needing the epidural!" Dimple, in comparison to her childhood friend, Gwyn, is positively a model child: a good student, a virgin who has only dated two boys, she doesn't do drugs or do anything out of the ordinary to cause her parents to worry. It turns out that both Dimple and her parents are failing to realize what they have: a caring, lovely family unit and a strong cultural background in Dimple's case, and a very good daughter, in the case of her parents. Dimple's friend, Gwyn, is beautiful and blonde and slim and the center of attention, but she comes from a home where she was abandoned by her father and ignored by her mother, and she craves the stability of Dimple's family unit, which, of course, Dimple does not understand, since she longs to be beautiful and blonde and free of parental restrictions. Dimple's parents seek to control their daughter by introducing her to a "suitable boy" meaning, of course, another Indian boy, an NYU computer major, and the son of her mother's best friend. Dimple rejects the boy on principal, but then discovers that he is a slightly unsuitable boy, and begins to fall in love with him, along with her friend, Gwyn. Dimple spends the bulk of the novel discovering herself and her life, and realizing that what she has is really a gift. She is exposed to the temptations of teenaged life, she has her heart broken and she rebels against her parents, but it takes a long summer for her to see that everything she has really is something to be envied. The book is written in a charming, witty style, and, except for a few sort of "romance novel" plot twists, it is very engrossing. It is perfect for both adults and teens, and really should be read by parents and their teenagers. Comment | Permalink | (Report this)


    Back To Top

  • Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards))
    by Tanuja Desai Hidier
    List Price: $16.95
    Available from Amazon
    Price: $13.56
    on 7-30-2008
    Purchase Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards)) Here  Get info on Born Confused (Bccb Blue Ribbon Fiction Books (Awards))

    Previous item in Blue Books Next item in Blue Books
    NOTICE : All prices, availability, and specifications are subject to verification by their respective retailers.

    Books About Antiques

    Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
    info@antique-book-store.com
    Last Modified : 7-30-2008