Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

The ten stories in Pioneer Boulevard, named for the Artesia, CA street that is known as Little India, are set in the Indian community of Los Angeles. Most of the protagonists are, like the author, women who have migrated to LA from India, but the book is populated with characters from other countries, including Mexico, El Salvador, Vietnam, Pakistan, and England. Set in the context of the recent economic crisis, the sense of an overstretched, underfinanced world pervades these narratives. One woman must clinch the job that will sponsor her work permit; another has to sell her wedding necklace to pay the bills. A third learns about an unplanned pregnancy days after her husband has received notice of an impending layoff. Farcical and somber, wry and tender, these stories draw us into the chaotic, comic world of the pioneer, where habits of consumption and ways of relating—and even of speaking—are constantly in flux.

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Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

The ten stories in Pioneer Boulevard, named for the Artesia, CA street that is known as Little India, are set in the Indian community of Los Angeles. Most of the protagonists are, like the author, women who have migrated to LA from India, but the book is populated with characters from other countries, including Mexico, El Salvador, Vietnam, Pakistan, and England. Set in the context of the recent economic crisis, the sense of an overstretched, underfinanced world pervades these narratives. One woman must clinch the job that will sponsor her work permit; another has to sell her wedding necklace to pay the bills. A third learns about an unplanned pregnancy days after her husband has received notice of an impending layoff. Farcical and somber, wry and tender, these stories draw us into the chaotic, comic world of the pioneer, where habits of consumption and ways of relating—and even of speaking—are constantly in flux.

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Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

by Sharon Edwards
Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

Pioneer Boulevard: Los Angeles Stories

by Sharon Edwards

Paperback

$14.99 
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Overview

The ten stories in Pioneer Boulevard, named for the Artesia, CA street that is known as Little India, are set in the Indian community of Los Angeles. Most of the protagonists are, like the author, women who have migrated to LA from India, but the book is populated with characters from other countries, including Mexico, El Salvador, Vietnam, Pakistan, and England. Set in the context of the recent economic crisis, the sense of an overstretched, underfinanced world pervades these narratives. One woman must clinch the job that will sponsor her work permit; another has to sell her wedding necklace to pay the bills. A third learns about an unplanned pregnancy days after her husband has received notice of an impending layoff. Farcical and somber, wry and tender, these stories draw us into the chaotic, comic world of the pioneer, where habits of consumption and ways of relating—and even of speaking—are constantly in flux.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780989323307
Publisher: Consonant Books
Publication date: 06/29/2013
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.20(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Sharon Edwards, who was born and raised in India, became a US citizen in 2005, six years after moving to Los Angeles. She holds an MA in English from Pune University, India, and one in Creative Writing from Keele University, UK. Prior to moving to Los Angeles in 1999, Sharon lived in Mumbai, where she conducted workshops on interpersonal communication and earned a living by modeling. In LA she has worked mostly in publishing and entertainment, and her last full-time job was that of a proofreader at Warner Bros., Burbank. This is her first book.

Read an Excerpt

“She wasn’t attuned to double entendre and had adopted en masse the Americanisms she heard around her, which Vinita had picked up more judiciously and reserved for conversations with Americans. Vinita simply wanted to be understood, whereas Piyali wanted to fit in. After fifteen years in LA, where she'd moved as a young bride, she had managed to do this quite well, even if her accent still held traces of the old inflection. America was home now.”

—from “Crocodile Tears,” pp. 33-34

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“An elegant and wise collection. Stories about immigrant experience, fractured identity, and the cacophony of values coexisting in LA, told in a vivid, funny, Technicolor voice, as rigorously accurate as it is wild.”

—Joe Stretch, author of The Adult, winner of a 2013 Somerset Maugham award

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