Set in the British Guiana, the plantation heiress Joan Dart, fall in love with the black rebel Jackey Reed. As savage and lusty, here is a story of men and women deeply attracted to each other, yet forbidden to express their passion except in terms of sadism and cruelty -- the powerful story of the strange and terrible loves that flourish between oppressor and oppressed. This savage and beautiful novel explores one of the great hidden tragedies of slavery -- the sexual tragedy. The terrifying passions unleashed by a bloody black rebellion even more explosive than Mandingo!
Christopher Robin Nicole was born on 7 December 1930 in Georgetown, British Guiana (now Guyana), where he was raised. He is the son of Jean Dorothy (Logan) and Jack Nicole, a police officer, both Scottish. He studied at Queen's College in Guyana and at Harrison College in Barbados. He was a fellow at the Canadian Bankers Association and a clerk for the Royal Bank of Canada in Georgetown and Nassau from 1947 to 1956. In 1957, he moved to Guernsey, Channel Islands, United Kingdom, where he currently lives, but he also has a domicile in Spain.
On 31 March 1951, he married his first wife, Jean Regina Amelia Barnett, with whom he had two sons, Bruce and Jack, and two daughters, Julie and Ursula, they divorced. On 8 May 1982 he married for the second time with fellow writer Diana Bachmann.
As a romantic and passionate of history, Nicole has been published since 1957, when he published a book about West Indian Cricket. He published his first novel in 1959 with his first stories set in his native Caribbean. Later he wrote many historical novels set mostly in tumultuous periods like World War I, World War II and the Cold War, and depict places in Europe, Asia and Africa. He also wrote classic romance novels. He specialized in Series and Sagas, and continues to write into the 21st century with no intention of retiring.
A very interesting, fascinating & unique book written on true events that shows how the betrayal of one's own blood thwarts the revolutionaries who raise their heads.