Primeros reseñadoresMargaret Cezair-Thompson

Página LibraryThing del autor

September 2007 Lote

Sorteo terminado: Septiembre 15 a las 12:00 am EDT

"Back in America, little was known of my life in Jamaica," wrote Errol Flynn. In 1946, a storm-wrecked boat carrying Hollywood's most famous swashbuckler shored up on the coast of Jamaica, and the glamorous world of 1940's Hollywood converged with that of a small West Indian society. After a long and storied career on the silver screen, Errol Flynn spent much of the last years of his life on a small island off of Jamaica, throwing parties and sleeping with increasingly younger teenaged girls. Based on those years, The Pirate's Daughter is the story of Ida, a local girl who has an affair with Flynn that produces a daughter, May, who meets her father but once. Spanning two generations of women whose destinies become inextricably linked with the matinee idol's, this lively novel tells the provocative history of a vanished era, of uncommon kinships, compelling attachments, betrayal and atonement in a paradisal, tropical setting. As adept with Jamaican vernacular as she is at revealing the internal machinations of a fading and bloated matinee idol, Margaret Cezair-Thompson weaves a saga of a mother and daughter finding their way in a nation struggling to rise to the challenge of independence.
Medios
Papel
Géneros
General Fiction, Historical Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Nonfiction
Ofrecido por
Unbridled Books (Editorial)
Enlaces
Información del libroPágina LibraryThing de la obra
Lote cerrado
15
copias
390
solicitudes