Two sides of different coins that just happen to be in the same purse, Isa and Gala have such fantastic interactions that I would probably read a spin-off novel from Gala’s perspective. Though I suspect it would be a novella, if that. Perhaps a brochure. Gala simply has different interests than our narrator, is all.
Read MoreIf it is a story of the failures of capitalism, the collapse of the promise of an attainable American Dream for the generation reading it, then it is a clunky one. The book is called Pizza Girl, a job that delineates, without defining, the narrator. It is what pushes the plot forward, what serves as a call-and-response from the catalyst-character of Jenny Hauser, who eventually drops the, “Hey, Pizza Girl” detachment and perhaps sees her as we see her, as a someone who is both less and more than her occupation:
Read MoreThere was a plane in the sky and I was trying to guess how many people were inside it. I pictured every seat, every person, and I wondered about their names, ages, jobs, what they were listening to on their iPods, where they were coming from, who they were going home to.