Thursday, September 29, 2022
How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water
HOW NOT TO DROWN IN A GLASS OF WATER by Angie Cruz is a fairly unique reading
experience. The story (set in 2009 in New York City) is told almost as a stream
of consciousness from Cara Romero, a fifty-something immigrant from the Dominican
Republic. She has lost her job at a factory and meets for twelve sessions with
an employment counselor for Seniors so that she can collect benefits and
hopefully find another position. As observers of her one-sided interviews,
readers learn about her family, including sister Angela and estranged son
Fernando, about her neighbors, including la Vieja Caridad (an older woman who
needs her help) and her friends like Lulu. There are numerous Spanish (or
Spanglish) phrases which the reader has to interpret from context, but that experience
adds to the sense of isolation and marginalization which Cara must feel in an
environment where she is not a native speaker. Increasingly in need of money
for rent, Cora considers work as a nanny, caregiver, school security guard and
more. Her responses to the bureaucratic forms are instructive about her
perspective, if cringe-worthy at times. Cruz has creatively and sensitively crafted
a story involving poverty and gentrification, family ties and survival.
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