A versatile and probing novelist, Mazza is at her clarion best in this riveting improvisation on the lost world chronicled in her memoir, Indigenous: Growing Up Californian (2003). Ronnie works in the geriatric hospital in which her stroke-afflicted father lives, but Medicare patients such as he are being forced to leave, and she decides that now is the time to attend to some mysterious, unfinished business involving the remains of her brother and mother, whose shocking deaths have so cruelly oppressed her. But their odd quest is interrupted by a pack of violent suburban teens. Rescued by a handsome and enigmatic migrant worker advocate, Ronnie and her father follow his lead and seek shelter deep in the canyons. As they struggle to survive, their tragic past unfolds in vivid flashbacks, and Mazza's mythic and mesmerizing tale charts the cruel paradoxes inherent in migrant workers' lives.
For those interested, the San Francisco Humanities Review has published online a long scholarly review of Homeland by Harriet Rafter, who teaches courses in the California novel at San Francisco State University. [...]
Cris Mazza at her best
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
It's heartening to read a prolific writer whose work grows richer with each new publication. Thankfully, Mazza's customarily unsentimental characterization remains ruthlessly present in Homeland, but this novel also provides the reader with new gifts. Homeland's main character, Ronnie, evokes a reader's pathos. Her unwitting vulnerability and sexual naivete make her a rare figure among Mazza's sexually savvy main characters, rendering her psychological life even more mysterious than Mazza's usually complex protagonists. The story itself grapples brilliantly with themes of family legacy, filial obligation, and childhood guilt. On another level, the narrative also raises important metafictional questions. The novel's principal mystery involves the interface of narrative, truth, and memory, which subtly interrogates the meaning of narrative itself. Ultimately, the reader is left to question the power of narrative and its capacity to shape one's psyche. When the plot's main mystery is revealed, the reader may even wonder whether someone can really exist whose life remains unwritten. This is the rare novel. It offers both a feast of ideas and the immersing satisfaction of more "traditional" narrative elements. Mazza, however, is a terrifically talented writer whose fine work is anything but "traditional."
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