“…delivers a fast-paced, energetic tale resonating with today’s most troubling and important issues.” –KIRKUS REVIEWSAzza Amari, a headstrong, hijab-wearing international student flees her dangerous life in the Paris ghetto to enroll at staid Northwestern Ohio State College. As the twentysomething refugee navigates her way among the commuter school’s working-class environs in tiny Fremont, Ohio, … school’s working-class environs in tiny Fremont, Ohio, Azza comes into the orbit of 17-year-old Kip Beckelhymer, a precocious, history-obsessed senior trying to win back the love of Birdie Hudgins, his mercurial high-school sweetheart.
Together, Kip and Azza discover an extraordinary kinship. All the while, the conservative hamlet—and especially Birdie—struggles to come to grips with what seems like the whole of the Islamic world has intruded into their workaday lives. Things come to a head when Kip and Azza find themselves on an unusual treasure hunt. Their whimsical search takes on deadly serious overtones as the strange duo inadvertently finds themselves peeling back the corrosive layers of cowardice and hate that linger just below the surface of their society in the Heartland.
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Thanks to Black Rose Writing, Kenneth Womack, and Netgalley for making I am Lemonade Lucy! available for a honest review.
Summary:
Lured by promises of a “full college experience” by a shady recruiter, Azza leaves Paris and arrives in Fremont, Ohio, home of Northwestern Ohio State College and the Rutherford B. Hayes museum. Her arrival (and her hijab) causes a stir in the small town. Because the college is a commuter school–the recruiter lied–the college houses her in a local motel and high school senior Kip drives her to and from the school.
Kip’s a bit . . . obsessed . . . with Rutherford B. Hayes. He spouts random RBH factoids at all the wrong moments to everyone from Ryan, his best friend, and Birdie, the girlfriend who dumped him (but he won’t admit it), to Azza and Colby, the new docent at the RBH museum, the only person who can top his knowledge of all things Hayes-related. The museum is run by the eccentric Fletch. Kip’s been on the board since 8th grade.
Then a crisis hits: former First Lady Lucy Hayes’ plaster of Paris pear has disappeared. An audit is coming up and, fearing that the board will use this as an excuse to shut down the struggling museum, Fletch begs Kip’s help in finding the lost pear.
You can guess what happens: Kip and Azza team up to find the pear (among other things that have mysteriously disappeared from the museum). Together with Ryan and Colby, they search. But their search reveals the prejudices lying beneath the surface of their tranquil little town.
(Note: In case you didn’t know and because Kip isn’t here to tell you this, “Lemonade Lucy” was the former First Lady’s nickname because she and the POTUS didn’t serve alcohol in the White House.)
My thoughts:
I have mixed feelings about this book. It’s always difficult for me to read a humorous book (or book intended to be humorous) because 95% of the time, I don’t find the book funny. But I did find parts of I am Lemonade Lucy! humorous.
A few things that didn’t work for me:
1. Azza & the portrayal of Islam
I like her. I think the author likes her. But how would a Muslim woman view her? As I read, I felt uneasy, questioning whether a Muslim would find this interpretation accurate, offensive, or somewhere in between.
For example, on her first day of school, Azza arranges her hijab to copy the “College Girl Look” found in a photo in a Muslim fashion magazine. The reader knows that absolutely no one in this rural midwestern town will notice how she wears the hijab, only that she is wearing one. They certainly won’t notice that her hijab is arranged differently than it was when she registered for classes. It’s dramatic irony. But could it be seen as making fun of her and the hijab?
Not being Muslim, it’s impossible for me to know this. Different Muslims would have different interpretations of these parts of the book, I’m sure.
2. Birdie-Kip romance
Birdie has dumped Kip at the beginning of chapter 2, but he’s in denial about this. As the novel progresses, Birdie becomes increasingly nasty. Really, she was a nasty, hateful person to begin with, but Kip just didn’t see it. I couldn’t stand her. She seems one-dimensional. I hear her name and all I hear is her screaming “Zero fucks” at Azza. Why did Kip ever find her attractive? Even his BFF doesn’t know.
3. The mystery
This is categorized on Netgalley as a mystery/thriller and women’s fiction. I don’t think this should’ve been categorized as a mystery/thriller. Sure, what happened to Mrs. Hayes’ plaster of Paris pear is puzzling for the characters, but it’s not compelling. It provides a little suspense, a little puzzle-solving, for this women’s novel and helps move the plot along and bring certain characters together, but that’s not a real mystery novel.
There’s a second “thriller” aspect that seems out of place in the book. Without spoiling this plot twist, let’s just say that the mostly light-hearted tone of the narration conflicts with a violent and dead-serious plot turn late in the book. It does, however, provide a moment of self-sacrifice and bravery.
What DID work for me:
1. The strong opening.
Azza brings her four-year tuition (in cash!) to the commuter school’s Registrar’s office, flustering all the registration staff. The narrator’s voice is great here: sympathetic, wry, slightly sad. The staff members are grey-haired ladies who have never encountered a student like Azza before. A hijab! A bag of cash! Oh my! And she thinks she’ll get tuition and board (at a commuter school) and a meal plan. They have no idea what to do.
Womack writes, “If they could have seen Azza beyond the hijab–if they had taken in the emotional contours of her face–those formidable women who comprised the grey-haired staff (they preferred to think of themselves as mature) would have glimpsed the fear in their most unexpected visitor’s eyes . . .” (chapter one)
The opening does multiple things. It shows Azza’s determination tinged with fear. It shows the quandary of what to do with a student who has been recruited with lies. It shows how people in this small town react to the presence of a Muslim. Also, it sets up the conflict that will continue throughout the novel.
2. Kip’s obsession with Rutherford B. Hayes
It’s just so odd, and it’s the oddity that works for me. Kip thinks that Azza is eccentric, though he doesn’t see his own eccentricities. How many teens geek out over Rutherford B. Hayes? Then again, how many teens even know who RBH is? And how fortuitous: just when his ex turns out to be a horrible person, he meets a terrific like-minded RBH fan who wants him to woo her.
3. The small town setting
I haven’t lived in a small town, but I’ve been in enough similar settings (churches, schools, college) that this portrayal of a small town rings true.
There are other things that worked for me, too. Overall, I think this is a good book. I enjoyed parts of it more than others, and I definitely enjoyed Womack’s voice as a writer. I would read other books by him.
4 stars.