She was a girl as beautiful and innocent as her family's lush Caribbean plantation—until she discovered the darkness of desire and became a woman. Expelled from paradise, Teresa Francis would be swept into marriage and the opulence of New York only to be drawn back to her island, where secrets can ignite explosions of political upheaval and clandestine love.
Belva Plain was a best-selling American author of mainstream women's fiction. Her first novel, Evergreen (1978) topped the New York Times bestseller list for 41 weeks and was made into a TV miniseries. At her death, there were over 30 million copies of her twenty-plus novels in print in 22 languages.
4.5 This was really so very good. I was immersed in the story and always eager to pick it up and continue. There were moments I wanted control of events so badly, to make people speak, to change the dialogue or actions, I was so affected. Perhaps though, that is proof of very good writing.
Many times, a sentence held profound sentiment and imagery, an understanding of our nature as humans, and the effect of our world around us, the land, and our backgrounds. Many statements were quotable, and I loved the style.
I remember before reading Belva Plain, as a kid. I think I will have to revisit this author. But, I'm going to be sure it ends the way I want it to. LOL
This is a story of loss of innocence, love, political upheaval, secrets and betrayal. It keeps the reader engaged from beginning to end. At the end I was disappointed that a big secret was never revealed. I recommend this book.
So I tried another one of her books. This one at least has a story so that's why it got 2 stars. But it had incredible dialogue like "What use is a women when her womb doesn't work?" Really...
Once again a great book by Belva. I love that she mixes history in with the story. It makes the reader understand what it was like to live through some of history.
As most of Belva's books, this one is a family tree of the Francois family, later known as Francis. It begins with Tee as a young girl on an island in the Caribbean known as St Felice. Tee isn't like the other kids her age. She doesn't understand the difference that everyone else see of black and whites. She befriends a black boy, and later he rapers her, resulting in a pregnancy when she is only 14. Her uncle sends her to Europe so her mother and sister won't find out about the pregnancy. Her servant, Agnus has never been able to have children, so she passes him off as her own naming him Patrick. Tee vows to never go back to St Felice, gets married and starts her own family. Try as she may, Tee ends up back in St Felice through her eldest son, Francis. It is quite the story of how Patrick finds his way back to the Francis family, without ever knowing that he is, in fact, part of it. Historically, the book begins with slave labor, and slavery in full swing. But, at the ending it is the 1970's. The Revolution is past and there is a growing fear of communism.
She was a girl as innocent and beautiful as her family's lush Caribbean plantation - until she learned about dark desire and became a woman. Banished from paradise, Teresa Francis was swept into marriage and motherhood in opulent New York - a world away from her beautiful St. Felice island. But eventually, the secrets that refused to stay buried would draw her back again to paradise. A paradise now in the throws of revolution, which forces Teresa to confront her past and watch her future unfold.
I loved this book. I think that Belva Plain is perhaps one of my favorite authors. I particularly enjoyed how the characters interacted together and the writing was wonderful, in my opinion. If I had one dislike of this book, it was that it was slightly too long. I find that I can't really read long books anymore. Overall, though, I give this book an A+!
Plain was one of my favourite authors in my early and mid-teens. This is the first time I've read her as an adult, and I think I'm not as into dramatic family/historical sagas as I was when I was when I was younger.
Plain is a decent writer, but this is definitely a race morality tale encircled by familial and romantic drama written by an older white woman in 1982. Though Plain is almost *there* on some topics, other times the story is cringe-worthy. The most cringe-worthy element is the black rape trope that begins the book.
Both main black men are murdered. Many of the women are underdeveloped and stereotypical characters, and serve only as catalysts for the experiences of men in the story.
The pace of the story is often fast and uneven, passing through years in a paragraph and then spending a lot of time in a seemingly inconsequential moment. I also didn't think that Mebane's turn was fleshed out enough.
Anywho...fine book for a light read, but this story has some major problems.
Took me awhile to get into the story. After the first 100 pages it came together. Interesting and well written, lots of research went into this. Not one I wouldn't read again. Lost my concentration in too many areas.
Grabbed some books of a shelf of 70s paperbacks while visiting my mom last week. Now I've got a head cold and I'm plowing through some of them...
Nice slow writing, with (dare I say it) a 70s style. A little boring, with a real effort at character development, but somehow it still seemed thin even after 500 pages.
Having recently read Americanah, which truly hits home on race relations, this felt quaint.
Really, not a bad pick for spending a week-end on the sofa with a cold in mid-May while a snowstorm dumps outside.
This historical fiction follows the course of a made-up caribbean island as it pursues independence. There are a lot of elements in the book that I liked such as exploration of class, gender, and race however somehow I failed to connect to many of the characters and they never ended up feeling "real" to me. Overall, it was a quick and enjoyable read that didn't manage to make me feel much.
After reading several richly written books, the writing style was so superficial. The many characters were hard to keep straight. The wives were shallow. It did cause me to view tropical paradises in a different light.
Roman historique mélangeant la colonisation, l'indépendance, les cartels, la montée du communisme, le tout lié à une histoire familiale compliquée qui traverse les époques. Très belle lecture pour moi.
J'ai aimé la façon d'écriture qui donne sensation que le livre était écrit originalement en français. La langue est simple et les descriptions sont bien faites. Un livre plein de leçon avec plusieurs événements et discussions sur la politique.
Was it well written? 5 stars Was it a good story? 5 stars Good character development? 5 stars Did it make me think? Yes!! Did it make me feel? Yes Great book
I enjoyed the different story lines but sometimes it was difficult for me to follow who was say what. I was also a little disappointed with the ending, but it's somewhat true to life. If it was easier to follow the character transitions I would have given it a 4.