Dixieland Sushi has not yet been reviewed at SensualRomance Reviews.
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"deep chick lit look at interracial offspring"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted June 12, 2005 on The Best Reviews
SummaryJen Nakamara Taylor didn't have a conventional childhood. In
her hometown of Dixieland, Arkansas, most girls' mothers
didn't serve sushi at their tenth birthday parties. As a
television producer living in Chicago, she thinks she's left
her childhood insecurities behind. Then she receives an
invitation to the marriage of her grammar-school crush to
her beauty-queen cousin. The subsequent search to find a
suitable date, eventful trip back South, and the riotous
wedding are all hilarious, but the real appeal of this book
lies in its portrayal of a woman confronting her past and
embracing her present. Each chapter begins with a platitude
from The Karate Kid's Mr. Miyagi, and every other chapter
weaves in scenes from Jen's childhood. It seems odd at
first, but helps reveal the character's quirky
sensibilities. Lockwood is half-Japanese herself, and here
she ably and humorously depicts the struggle to fit in.
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