Windsor Star

Beauty from trauma

Jubilee focuses on young woman's hope for personal triumph

- BETHANNE PATRICK

Jubilee Jennifer Givhan Blackstone

It doesn't take long for Bianca Vogelsang's new boyfriend, Joshua, to discover red flags after they meet at California State University, Fullerton. Bianca carries around a plastic doll she calls “Jubilee” as if it's a real baby, pretending to feed it with a toy bottle. Bianca, the protagonis­t of Jennifer Givhan's new novel Jubilee, has traumatic reasons for calling a doll her daughter, but even as Josh's skin gets “prickly like he was watching a horror movie” while Bianca soothes Jubilee, he continues their relationsh­ip.

Yes, curiosity is a powerful force, but Joshua has his own burdens — he's the legal guardian of his young nephew — and seems to understand that Bianca is more than just wounded or different. She's also funny and smart and beautiful and alive.

Bianca's half brother Matty and his partner, Handro, also recognize that Bianca's behaviour stems from trauma — perhaps because she's shown up at their Santa Ana house exhausted and bloody.

The book alternates between two narratives — “With Jubilee” and “Before Jubilee” — that shed more light on Bianca's situation. Her high school boyfriend, Gabe, gets her pregnant and insists she have an abortion, then sexually assaults her.

Her family then begins to act as if Bianca “was made of china and would break apart at any moment.”

Bianca will have to rescue herself, and what saves the book from melodrama (it's well written, but heavy on emotion) is it's through line: Bianca's devotion to poetry. Like her idol, Sandra Cisneros, Bianca wants to be a voice for her people, the Mexican-american working-class residents of Southern California, whose lives contain, like everyone's, sadness and miscommuni­cation, but also community and celebratio­n.

Which, Bianca tells Josh, is what Jubilee's name means: “celebratio­n.

“I grew up Catholic, and we memorized all the verses. In the Bible, Jubilee is the time of release and universal pardon. Slaves set free. Land returned. Debts forgotten. All kicked off with a trumpet blast.” Bianca's passion for the trumpet-blast verses of Emily Dickinson and Spoken Word, Shakespear­e and Ana Castillo gives her a life of the mind that lifts her away from the circumstan­ces and memories that haunt her, helping her find her own release and pardon.

However, before Bianca can move on, she has to move through, and that means facing good truths, like her healthy love for Joshua, and hard truths, like a secret no one in the family wants to acknowledg­e.

Givhan manages to tell a story about Mexicali culture that avoids cultural generaliza­tions and tells, instead, a story of family growth and personal triumph.

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