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Under a Dark Summer Sky

por Vanessa Lafaye

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
10614256,784 (3.77)1
Fiction. Literature. Historical Fiction. HTML:

Under a Dark Summer Sky is a stunning debut novel, at once a love story set in a time of great turmoil and a vivid depiction of a major natural disaster.

Florida, 1935. In Heron Key, relationships are as tangled as the swamp's mangrove roots. It's been eighteen long years since Henry went away to war. Still, Missy has waited, cleaning the Kincaids' house and counting the stars. Now he's back, but she barely recognizes the desperate, destitute veteran he's become??unsure of his future, ashamed of his past. When a white woman is found beaten nearly to death after the Fourth of July barbecue, suspicion falls on him immediately. As tensions rise in the small community, the barometer starts to plummet??a massive hurricane is on its way.

Based on real historical events, Under a Dark Summer Sky evokes what happens when people, sweating under the weight of their pasts, are tested to the absolute limits of their endurance… (más)

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Based on a horrific hurricane hitting the town of Islamorada on Labor Day in 1935 and, more specifically, on a video on the Florida Keys historical society website (http://www.keyshistory.org/shelf1935hurrpage15.html), Vanessa Lafaye has written a memorable story about the residents of the mythical town of Heron Key. Tensions are running high in the town: white versus black and local residents versus displaced, disgruntled WWI veterans hired to build the highway across the Keys. When a local beauty queen gone to seed, following the birth of her son, is viciously beaten, the townfolk are seeking justice, ahead of the law. Meanwhile, the local police chief has been cuckolded by his wife, and has a mixed race son, and his agenda is unclear. When this powerful storm hits, the town divides and the veterans, living in hastily constructed shacks, have no idea what is coming and have again been abandoned by their government. Underneath all of this misery though, there are stories of courage, family, love, hatred, friendship, and leadership. A good one for book clubs. ( )
  skipstern | Jul 11, 2021 |
It is summer 1935. America has come out of the other side of the first world war and is in the midst of the depression. The brave men who fought in the great War have been abandoned by the government who have failed to keep their promises of pensions and other financial support. A large number of them placed in a camp near the tiny Florida community of Heron Key. This was the time of segregation and the tension in the town with so many soldiers nearby is raised further again.

After the July the 4th celebrations a white residents wife is found badly beaten and left for dead by a road. One of the soldiers is arrested for her attempted murder and the uneasy truce between the residents and the troops is shattered. As the pressures build in the community and residents are looking to take matters into their own hands, the barometer is dropping, fast. It is hurricane season, and whilst Heron Keys has suffered these before, no one has a single idea just what is coming in.

Lafaye has used a bit of artistic licence to bring together several threads and events that happened at broadly similar times. There is the frustration and anger of troops who were promised so much by politicians and received so little, there is the culture of segregation that was frankly poisonous and there is the looming presence of the hurricane that will bring disaster to the Florida Keys. I felt that the first 100 pages of so of the book dragged as the characters were introduced and the scenes were set. After that the book managed to raise the pace and was much better, with the swirl of trial and tribulations of the people of that small community. The description of the residents in the hurricane is pretty scary too as the storm releases its full power. The most terrifying thing is this that tale was all drawn from a set of true stories too. The plight of the troops was real, forced to work and not given the monies they were promised, the horror of segregation and the hurricane that decimated this part of Florida was one of the strongest recorded. Worth reading and a fitting tribute to those that died in this natural disaster.

There are pictures of the area, before and after, here: http://www.keyshistory.org/shelf1935hurr.html ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
Interesting story about the post WW1 treatment by US government of returned veterans through the story of a bridge build exercise in Florida and what happens during a massive hurricane. Based on fact. ( )
  ElizabethCromb | Jan 1, 2020 |
I was lucky to win Summertime from Holly at Bookaholic Confessions. I have to say that I was thrilled when my copy of Summertime arrived, I hadn’t realised that I’d won a hardback copy! I sensed this would be a good book, and in this I wasn’t disappointed. In fact, not only did I enjoy Summertime, I would say that I loved Summertime.

It is an excellent debut by Vanessa Lafaye and I would highly recommend it.

Summertime is a fictional story based upon the labour day hurricane of 1935. It is set in Heron Key in Florida during the nineteen thirties. In this fictionalised account the storm takes place after the 4th July celebrations. There is an annual beach party in which racial tensions are set to explode, like lit fireworks, but the celebratory fireworks hold back, refusing to light. The habitual fight between white and black is engrained into the very fabric of this society ravaged by a deep and destructive racial divide.

I loved the sense of place, which is conveyed so vividly in the opening paragraph: “The humid air felt like water in the lungs, like drowning.”

The characters – there are so many and yet Vanessa Lafaye details them all in a way that makes them so real, and engaging. There are so many elements to this novel, it touches upon racial tensions, an attempted murder, the far-reaching effects of abuse, even magical spells play a part!

The developing love story between Missy and Henry is so endearing. The reader senses that Henry will do anything to protect Missy, and Missy will wait for Henry forever if needs be. Missy loves the white baby boy that she cares for, and wants only to protect him from harm. Henry arrives back in Heron Key but he is not the same man who left, war has left him in a state in which : “He felt like a ghost, haunting a former life where he didn’t belong any more.” Missy has grown from a child into a strong young woman who will fight against the forces of nature to get what she wants: “She was tired of being blown around like a leaf, with no say in anything that mattered. Anger rose up her spine like a column of molten steel and her back straightened…… By God, I will not fail at this.”

The way in which Vanessa Lafaye transports you to the very eye of the storm, make this in my opinion a must read novel. The two main characters Missy and Henry are without doubt my favourites. Henry is so drawn to Heron Key, even though he knows Heron’s Keys terrible shortcomings. Henry has experienced a sense of freedom in a culture of non-discrimination in his time in the battlefields of France, but is this a country he wants to call home? Vanessa Lafaye uses a rubber band analogy to suggest how drawn he is to Heron Key: “It was like he was attached to the place by a long rubber band that was now stretched to its absolute limit.”

The war veterans are all different, some are good men, some are not, but none of them are welcomed in Heron Key. These hardened men don’t seem so tough when they encounter the force of the hurricane. It is as if the sheer force of the destructive natural elements of the hurricane are so much more fierce and terrifying than the atrocities of war. In a war, I suppose you have a sense of when the battle is over but in a hurricane, no such certainty exists, just when the winds quieten you realise that the hurricane is playing with you, it is deceiving you, readying itself to deliver its final fatal blow.

” There was a collective moan, which quickly rose to an awful, haunt-ing cry. It sent a stab of dread right through Trent’s heart. He knew that noise, had heard it before: it was the sound men make when they realise they are about to die.”

Not only can the winds get you but the rising water can too: “So this is what it feels like to die in a washing machine!”

The aftermath is devastating: “In the quiet left by the wind, he noticed the complete absence of birds. No gulls, no pelicans, no buzzards, even with the carpet of death below him.”

The carnage that the hurricane leaves in its wake is every bit as devastating and shocking as a war zone. The hurricane strips everyone bare of their possessions, their clothes, and ultimately their human dignity. Survival becomes paramount, petty quarrels, and racial hatred are stripped away for that tiny moment in time. Yet, there are always those with hatred in their hearts, who instigate fear and hatred in others, and this is demonstrated so clearly when white people ask the black folks to leave the apparent safety of the shelter when there is not enough room: “Traitorous stars shone within a circle of swirling cloud.”

The epilogue ends with the words, “Time to begin,” suggesting a new life will start, this new life won’t be without its trial and tribulations but it will be filled with a new-found sense of hope.

I tend to get so involved in books. This time I was so deeply affected by Summertime that one night I dreamt that my bed was filled with hurricane winds! I could feel myself being lifted, and buffeted on a bed of sheets, and thrown up and down in the air. Luckily my dream carried me gently up and down as if I was on a trampoline of buffeting air, but sadly in this book, and in real life many people die in hurricanes, white and black alike, the interesting and emotive point that Vanessa Lafaye makes is this: the hurricane doesn’t discriminate. There are so many poignant moments, family members choose death rather than be separated from their loved ones, mothers save their children instead of themselves. Life is such a precious treasure, why waste it by hating other people just because they’re different?

My rating:

It couldn’t be less than 5 stars
( )
  marjorie.mallon | Mar 27, 2019 |
Heron Key – Florida im Jahr 1935: Missy ist Dienstmädchen bei den Kincaids und kümmert sich um das Baby Nathan. Sie wartet aber auch auf Henry, der vor fast zwanzig Jahren in den Krieg nach Europa zog. Seither wartet Missy auf ihn und zählt die Sterne. Dann taucht Henry wieder auf. Aber von dem stolzen jungen Mann ist wenig geblieben. Er bleibt lieber bei den anderen Veteranen, denn er will weder seiner Schwester Selma noch seinen Freunden von einst zur Last fallen mit dem, was die Kriegserlebnisse bei ihm hinterlassen haben. Als sie aus dem Krieg zurückgekehrt waren, hatte man ihnen zugejubelt, doch dann hat die Regierung die Auszahlung des versprochenen Bonus bis 1945 verschoben und die Veteranen hatten sich aus Protest vor dem weißen Haus niedergelassen. Sie wurden von ihren eigenen Leuten niedergepflügt. Es ist nicht einfach während der Weltwirtschaftskrise einen Job zu finden. Ein Bauprojekt der Regierung in Florida schien der letzte Ausweg zu sein, um nicht verhungern zu müssen.
In Heron Key wird anlässlich des 4. Juli jedes Jahr ein Barbecue veranstaltet. Während des Festes wird Hilda Kincaid gefunden, die halbtot geprügelt wurde. Henry gerät in Verdacht.
Es hat ein wenig gedauert, bis ich mich in die Geschichte hineingefunden habe, denn es gibt eine Menge Personen, die ich miteinander in Verbindung bringen musste. Alle sind sehr gut und individuell ausgearbeitet. Neben Missy und Henry mochte ich besonders Missys Mutter, von allen nur Mama genannt, und Doc Williams.
Die Sklaverei ist vorbei, aber die Rassentrennung ist immer noch da. Einer weißen Frau ist etwas passiert und so glaubt man, dass es nur ein Schwarzer gewesen sein kann. Es brodelt in dem kleinen Ort und die Gefahr, dass man Henry lyncht, wenn man ihn in die Finger bekommt, ist groß.
Dazu fällt das Barometer an Jensons Laden ständig und er hat ein ungutes Gefühl, denn niemand weiß, wo der über dem Meer aufziehende Hurrikan auf die Küste trifft. Die Bewohner haben mit Unwettern ihre Erfahrung und sind vorbereitet, doch mit einer Naturkatastrophe diesen Ausmaßes sind auch sie überfordert. Die außergewöhnliche Situation Sorgt dafür, dass einige Menschen über sich hinauswachsen und dass die Unmenschlichkeit anderer noch größer wird.
Es ist ein überzeugender und sehr packender Roman, der auf historischen Ereignissen aufbaut. Die ganz besondere Atmosphäre auf den Keys ist wunderbar eingefangen.
Dieses bewegende Buch ist für mich ein absolutes Highlight! ( )
  buecherwurm1310 | Feb 10, 2019 |
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Fiction. Literature. Historical Fiction. HTML:

Under a Dark Summer Sky is a stunning debut novel, at once a love story set in a time of great turmoil and a vivid depiction of a major natural disaster.

Florida, 1935. In Heron Key, relationships are as tangled as the swamp's mangrove roots. It's been eighteen long years since Henry went away to war. Still, Missy has waited, cleaning the Kincaids' house and counting the stars. Now he's back, but she barely recognizes the desperate, destitute veteran he's become??unsure of his future, ashamed of his past. When a white woman is found beaten nearly to death after the Fourth of July barbecue, suspicion falls on him immediately. As tensions rise in the small community, the barometer starts to plummet??a massive hurricane is on its way.

Based on real historical events, Under a Dark Summer Sky evokes what happens when people, sweating under the weight of their pasts, are tested to the absolute limits of their endurance

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