|
|
 |
|
Author Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez.
|
|
|
LOS ANGELES (By Ashley Powers, LATimes)
April 24, 2007 —
Don't call "The Dirty Girls Social Club," Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez's
new novel, hot or spicy. Those clichés are always applied to Hispanics, she
says.
While you're at it, don't call the novel,
about upscale young Hispanic women who meet as students at Boston University and
come together regularly thereafter, a Hispanic novel.
Hispanics are not just one thing, Ms.
Valdes-Rodriguez says. "They are black, white, mestizo and anything else.
Alberto Fujimori, a former president of Peru, is about as Hispanic as you get,
though he is of Japanese heritage."
Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez — half Cuban, part
Irish-American, with American Indian thrown in — does not know Spanish well
enough to write a novel in it.
Nonetheless some are calling Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez,
who received a $475,000 advance for "Dirty Girls," the "Latina Terry McMillan,"
saying that her book will be for Hispanics what Ms. McMillan's "Waiting to
Exhale" was for blacks, proof of a big audience for fiction among the 37 million
Hispanics in the United States. "Dirty Girls" (St. Martin's Press) has a first
printing of 125,000 copies in English (10,000 in Spanish).
The title comes from the Spanish word sucia,
or dirty girl, and is the irreverent name the characters give themselves. "I see
it as a mainstream book that features Hispanic characters," Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
said. She also hopes it explodes stereotypes.
Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez, 34, has a soft voice,
but she is tough. She once called The Boston Globe, where she was a reporter, "a
racist institution" in an article that the newspaper published about itself.
(The Globe is owned by The
New York Times Company.)
In a parting letter to The Los Angeles
Times, where she also worked, she criticized that paper for its "racialist
view."
Columbia Pictures has optioned the book,
with Jennifer Lopez and Laura Ziskin as producers. Ms. Lopez would be great as
the main character, Lauren, a Boston newspaper columnist, Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
said, adding, "She does festering anger really well."
The book's characters are a cross section
of Hispanics. Lauren is half-Cuban, half-Anglo, or "white trash," as she puts
it.
"She's 20 percent me," Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
said. Lauren says she is hired to write a column so her newspaper can "connect
to the Latina people or whatever." Her editor, Chuck, has "the intellect of a
newborn hamster" and tells her to write " `hey girlfriend' kind of things.' "
"I was hired only to be a red-hot-'n'-spicy
clichéd chili pepperish cross between Charo and Lois Lane," Lauren says. "They
still haven't figured out what a fraud I am." Lauren doesn't speak Spanish.
The other women are Usnavys, vice president
of the United Way, Dominican and Puerto Rican; Elizabeth, black Colombian,
entertainment newscaster; Sara, a wealthy, light-skinned, blue-eyed Cuban Jew;
Rebecca, European and American Indian, editor of Ella, a Latina women's
magazine; and Amber, Mexican-American rock singer who considers herself Aztec.
A major topic at their gatherings is
romance. "There's no way a therapist can solve the crisis of chronic,
mother-sanctioned infidelity among Latin men," says Lauren, who has an
unfaithful boyfriend.
Like her characters, Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
has a complex ethnic background. She was born in Albuquerque. Her father, Nelson
Valdes, was born in Cuba. He came to the United States in the early 1960's and
is a sociology professor at Duke University.
Her mother, Maxine Conant, is descended
from Puritan New England stock, with traces of Spanish, Portuguese-Jewish and
Pueblo Indian and roots generations-deep in New Mexico. Her maternal grandmother
is Irish-American.
When Alisa was 11, her mother left home.
"She was a wild woman," Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez said, "working for an escort
service and living with a pimp."
But Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez said her mother
transformed her life, earned a master's degree in creative writing and became a
writer. This year she was nominated for a Pushcart Prize for a story she
published. "I really credit her with making me a writer," Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
said.
Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez initially wanted to be
a saxophone player. She attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston, but
said that women were given second-class status there. In 1992 she wrote a piece
for The Globe about the difficulties women faced at the school. It began
sensitivity training for teachers and courses on the history of women in music.
"I saw the impact," Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez
said. "I thought, `Maybe there is a future for me in journalism.' "
After moving to New York and failing to
make it as a sax player, she enrolled at the Graduate School of Journalism at
Columbia University. Then, she said, The Globe offered her "a
minority-development job."
"I turned it down," she said. "I wanted to
think I was good enough to get in on my own."
When The Globe offered her "a real job,"
she said, she accepted. She and other female reporters began meeting for Girls'
Nights Out, the genesis of her novel.
Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez, however, believed
that The Globe's coverage of minorities was flawed. She wrote about a Dominican
store owner who was killed in front of her daughter. That article ran inside the
local-news section, but an article about a woman missing from Newton, Mass., a
wealthy Boston suburb, ran on the front page.
"I started to talk about it," she said. "I
was labeled a troublemaker."
Then, in 1998, came the ousting of Patricia
Smith, a black columnist who was asked by The Globe to resign when she admitted
fabricating characters and quotations.
Some staff members complained that a white
columnist, Mike Barnicle, had fabricated, too, but was treated more gently. He
was later asked to resign. That was when Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez was quoted in The
Globe, calling it "a racist institution."
Nick King, one of her editors, remembers
her as "talented and controversial."
"The Globe was always extremely
conscientious about its coverage of minorities," he said. Still, "a lot of
things she raised were really substantial."
In 1999 Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez married
Patrick Rodriguez, a writer. She quit The Globe, and they moved to Los Angeles,
where she covered the Spanish-language music industry for The Los Angeles Times.
She became pregnant and left to do her own writing. In a parting letter to her
supervisor she objected to the way Hispanic was used to describe brown-skinned
Spanish-speakers: " `Hispanic' — as used in The Los Angeles Times — is the most
recent attempt at genocide perpetrated against the native people of the
Americas."
She moved to Albuquerque and in 2001 her
son, Alexander, was born. She proposed a book about Latina singers to a New York
agent. Publishers rejected it but asked if she had a novel. She had been writing
novels for years, culled from them and came up with "Dirty Girls." Five
publishers bid for it.
St. Martin's was not the highest bidder,
Ms. Valdes-Rodriguez said, but "they saw it as a mainstream book." She added,
"They looked at me as an American, not just Hispanic."
"It was just like at the beginning of The
Globe," she said. "I wanted to be just like everyone else."