<b>Beautifully written and entertaining</b>
Irish Examiner
<b>Cruz once again offers a fresh glimpse of immigration, womanhood, aspiration and gentrification . . . Twelve sessions with a job counsellor provide the framework for Cruz's endearing portrait of a fierce, funny woman . . . told in Cara's unfailingly frank, sometimes hilarious, voice </b>
Washington Post
<b>A taut and poignant novel centred around a 56-year-old Dominican woman grappling with motherhood, acceptance and loss in the midst of the Great Recession . . . Cruz prioritises the importance of seeing an individual's humanity even within the most impersonal of systems</b>
- Zakiya Dalila Harris, author of The Other Black Girl, New York Times
<b>An acerbic look at the effects that gentrification, recession and racial profiling have had on the immigrant experience</b>
- Irish Times,
<b>A story that weaves the impersonal enormity of the system with a deeply personal, believable and engaging narrative . . . By turns hilarious, tender and moving, this short novel packs a mighty big punch</b>
- Business Post,
<b>Will have you laughing line after line, even when you wonder if you should be (The answer is always yes! ) . . . Cruz's new novel aims for the heart, and fires</b>
Los Angeles Times
<b>Cruz's latest novel blazes with brilliance, from its first-person character development to its structure to its deliciously slow reveals . . . you can't help but root for Cara</b>
The AV Club
<b>Direct and full of personality . . . turning these pages is like bring invited into a neighbour's kitchen for a good gossip session . . . Cruz has created an unforgettable character in Cara</b>
New York Journal of Books
<b>A tender and quintessentially American portrait</b>
Publishers Weekly