From Publishers Weekly
The accomplished Braverman's ( Palm Latitudes ) latest work seems destined to draw unfavorable comparisons with Mona Simpson's Anywhere but Here . Like Simpson's novel, it concerns a girl whose feckless young mother uproots them both to California in search of fame and fortune; however, Braverman's plotting is stale and heavy-handed. Jordan is only 10 when Roxanne (nee Ruth) plans their escape from a middle-class existence in 1960s New Jersey, choosing her brother Louie's home in Los Angeles as a destination. The car trip bodes ill--Roxanne is forced to pawn her possessions when she can't locate her targeted hosts along the way; Roxanne and Jordan are reduced to sleeping in their car; the eponymous Wonders of the West, billed as a tourist attraction, is a thudding letdown. Braverman splices scenes from this trip into Jordan's account of her senior year in an L.A. high school, where she is flunking five subjects despite her 157 IQ, while Roxanne, now posing as Jordan's sister, scrounges for movie studio work and hunts for a sugar daddy. Louie and his wife have indeed taken them in, but Louie is ill with cancer and their apartment is part of a depressing complex reserved for hospital patients and their families. Braverman's prose style is characteristically incisive and her observations both witty and unsparing, but these talents barely justify this sadly predictable excursion.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
In her own voice, 17-year-old Jordan Lerner details her meager existence with a terminally ill uncle and his wife in early 1960s Los Angeles, then relives a harrowing cross-country trek with her neglectful mother. Braverman's lyrical fourth novel, which follows Squandering the Blues ( LJ 9/1/90) and Palm Latitudes ( LJ 6/1/88), demonstrates why she was twice nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in poetry. But even as readers dreamwalk with Jordan through her lush garden of description, they may grow weary of hacking away at the overgrowth. In addition, Jordan's eventual steps toward liberation are not totally convincing for a young woman beset with Cold War fears and an unusually high level of angst and apathy. Hasn't Jordan already learned before that the "wonders of the West" may be illusory? For literary collections.
- Faye A. Chadwell, Univ. of South Carolina Lib., ColumbiaCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.