
Lara Rios (1)
Author of Becoming Latina in 10 Easy Steps
For other authors named Lara Rios, see the disambiguation page.
Lara Rios (1) has been aliased into Julia Amante.
Works by Lara Rios
Works have been aliased into Julia Amante.
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Amante, Julia
- Gender
- female
- Education
- California State University, San Bernardino (MFA)
University of California, Riverside (BA)
Long Beach City College - Organizations
- Romance Writers of America
- Short biography
- Lara Rios had the misfortune of growing up away fromthe extended family that is so valued in the Latin culture, but missed out on very little of what it means to be Argentine. Asados were sacred mealsshared together on weekends. Lara lives in California with her husband, son, daughter, and one pampered dachshund. When she's not writing she enjoys challenging herself physically.
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- San Fernando, California, USA
- Places of residence
- Los Angeles, California, USA
Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina
Highland, California, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- California, USA
Members
Reviews
Becoming Americana is a sequel of sorts to Becoming Latina in 10 Easy Steps. It takes place several years later, when the young Lupe Perez we met in the first book is grown up and working on making it out of the old neighborhood. She's a student at UCLA and volunteers at The Vibe, a center for at-risk teens.
It's not easy. All she wants is to keep her head down, finish school, and get out. But when she helps a fellow student after a mugging, it leads to an article in the school paper making show more her sound like a heroine and an All-American success story--Bad Girl from the Barrio Makes Good--giving her celebrity and leading people to view her as a type, not a person. To top it off, her professor wants her to write her thesis on Americanization, so she's thinking about what it means to be American.
The story follows Lupe as she escapes her brother; moves in with Nash, The Vibe's director, who she's had a crush on for years; starts to date Will, the student who wrote the article; and has to make a choice between a great job and finishing school.
It's full of emotional ups and downs, gritty realism, love, heartbreak, acceptance, and betrayal. I shared her pain at the decision to leave her family; and I shared her dilemmas of Nash or Will, school or the job. Through it all, however, what Lupe wants is what we all want: to be accepted as ourselves. She made some mistakes and some good choices, and ultimately, everything turned out for the best.
Normally, I complain about epilogues. Not this time. This epilogue was the end of the story--it wouldn't have been finished without it. There's an exception to every rule.
I thoroughly enjoyed Becoming Latina in 10 Easy Steps, but I liked Becoming Americana even better. Because Lupe's past is darker, the story is darker, but it's also full of life and hope. show less
It's not easy. All she wants is to keep her head down, finish school, and get out. But when she helps a fellow student after a mugging, it leads to an article in the school paper making show more her sound like a heroine and an All-American success story--Bad Girl from the Barrio Makes Good--giving her celebrity and leading people to view her as a type, not a person. To top it off, her professor wants her to write her thesis on Americanization, so she's thinking about what it means to be American.
The story follows Lupe as she escapes her brother; moves in with Nash, The Vibe's director, who she's had a crush on for years; starts to date Will, the student who wrote the article; and has to make a choice between a great job and finishing school.
It's full of emotional ups and downs, gritty realism, love, heartbreak, acceptance, and betrayal. I shared her pain at the decision to leave her family; and I shared her dilemmas of Nash or Will, school or the job. Through it all, however, what Lupe wants is what we all want: to be accepted as ourselves. She made some mistakes and some good choices, and ultimately, everything turned out for the best.
Normally, I complain about epilogues. Not this time. This epilogue was the end of the story--it wouldn't have been finished without it. There's an exception to every rule.
I thoroughly enjoyed Becoming Latina in 10 Easy Steps, but I liked Becoming Americana even better. Because Lupe's past is darker, the story is darker, but it's also full of life and hope. show less
Marcela finds out that she's half white, the result of an affair her mother had. Add to that her family's assertions that she's a sell-out, and not Mexican enough, and she's questioning her identity. So she, with the help of her best friend, makes a list of 10 steps that will help her discover her inner Latina and in the process find her self and get her family off her back. Really good story about a journey of self-discovery.
This started out rather weird. I couldn't buy this seemingly smart and successful woman being dumb enough to do some of the things she did. It did get better, thankfully, and I found myself really liking this book.
I made it through the fist chapter and wanted to throw this book across the room ( ok I did throw it across the room). The main charachter is so not believable and I just wanted to slap the her. Too bad I lost the receipt.
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 68
- Popularity
- #253,410
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 13
- Languages
- 2

