One Year of Ugly, Caroline Mackenzie
One Year of Ugly, Caroline Mackenzie
List: $25.99 | Sale: $18.20
Club: $12.99

One Year of Ugly

Author: Caroline Mackenzie

Narrator: Inés del Castillo

Unabridged: 9 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/07/2020


Synopsis

A “sparkling account” (Publishers Weekly) of the uproarious adventures that befall the Palacio family during their disastrous illegal residence in Trinidad that poignantly captures the complexities of dysfunctional families and passionate (but sometimes messy) romance.

After fleeing crumbling, volatile Venezuela, Yola Palacio wants nothing more than to settle into a peaceful new life in Trinidad with her family. And who cares if they’re there illegally—aren’t most of the people on the island? But life for the Palacios is far from quiet—and when Yola’s Aunt Celia dies, the family once again finds their lives turned upside down. For Celia had been keeping a very big secret—she owed a LOT of money to a local criminal named Ugly. And without the funds to pay him off, Ugly has the entire family do his bidding until Celia’s debt is settled. What Ugly says, the Palacios do, otherwise the consequences are too dreadful to imagine.

To say that the year that follows is tumultuous for the Palacios is an understatement. But in the midst of the turmoil appears Roman—Ugly’s distractingly gorgeous right-hand man. And although she knows it’s terrible and quite possibly dangerous, Yola just can’t help but give in to the attraction. Where, though, do Roman’s loyalties lie? And could this wildly inappropriate romance just be the antidote to a terrible year of Ugly?

Combining the spark of Imbolo Mbue with the irresistible wit of Maria Semple, One Year of Ugly is “a delightfully fun, enormously fresh debut” (Bookreporter) that brilliantly explores cross-cultural struggles and assimilation from a unique immigrant perspective and introduces us to an extraordinary new voice in contemporary fiction.

About Caroline Mackenzie

Caroline Mackenzie is a freelance translator living in Trinidad. She was shortlisted for the 2017 Commonwealth Short Story Prize and her nonfiction articles are regularly featured in regional magazines MACO People and MACO Caribbean Living. Her short fiction has been published in literary journals around the world. One Year of Ugly is her first novel.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Nilufer

Another book triggered different feelings and thoughts inside me at the same time: I laughed, I resented, I repulsed, I got entertained and I got sad. There are so many sensitive issues in this book including illegal immigrants’ lives, dysfunctional family issues, alcoholism, captivation, living und......more

Updated August 31, 2020 I ready this book and felt that it would be a great BookOfCinz Book Club pick and I was right! Re-reading this book the second time around, I did enjoy it a lot more. One Year of Ugly is Caroline’s Mackenzie’s debut novel, due to be released on July 14, 2020. In One Year of......more

Goodreads review by Gail

I am not the most sensitive reader, so a lot of subtleties go right over my head. With that said, if I notice sensitivity issues in a book, then they are blatant. I put it to you this way: If an author from another country wrote about your homeland and countrymen in a way that was not flattering, but......more

Goodreads review by Halcyon

Eccentric, hilarious and just pure mind-numbing entertainment, I was cracking up the whole time.......more


Quotes

"Inés del Castillo gives spirited voice to absolutely everyone in this packed first novel about a flamboyant Venezuelan family living illegally in Trinidad. Everything is fine until a gangster named Mr. Ugly forces the family to pay off their late aunt's debt by working in his strip club. Del Castillo gives our protagonist, the feisty 20-something daughter named Yola, a nice mix of sarcasm, drama, and sweetness. She also handles with flair Yola's love of swearing and over-the-top descriptions. The rest, from Yola's in-your-face mother to the menacing Mr. Ugly, are rendered just as believably. With some discussion of the plight of refugees intertwined with the story's wackiness, the audiobook is as timely as it is eye-rollingly amusing."