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Cargando... Black Cat (Gemini) (No. 2) (edición 2004)por V.C. Andrews
Información de la obraBlack Cat por V. C. Andrews
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. The premise of this story is interesting. A psychotic and possibly psychic woman forces her daughter to take on the identity of her dead twin brother, and when the daughter becomes pregnant, her mother weaves an even more complex scheme to hide the true identity of her daughter and her daughter's child. Whether the whole family is psychotic or actually psychic and seeing family spirits, their schemes prove lethal to just about everyone who gets too close, and may prove just as dangerous to the as-yet innocent children of their own family. The characters in this story are not always believable, and the 'black cat' that is referenced early in the book doesn't seem to figure in the rest of the novel at all, despite the fact that the title derives from it. Still, this novel presents an interesting, entertaining, and unusual story. ( ) IF YOU HAVE NOT READ "CELESTE", THE FIRST BOOK IN THIS SERIES, SPOILER ALERT!!! Celeste is forced by her (possibly schizophrenic) mother to live as her twin brother Noble after Noble's tragic, accidental death. In the last book, Celeste gave birth to "Baby Celeste" as the result of a neighbor boy finding out about her gender and blackmailing her into having sex with him. Noble/Celeste and her mother see the spirits of their dead ancestors and take advice from them. Although, since Celeste became Noble, they've been largely ignoring her. It's possible Baby Celeste is seeing and hearing them, too. When Mama decides the way to reveal Baby Celeste to the world is to marry the neighbor man, and tell everyone her cousin died and left the baby to her, the family's secrets must be guarded even closer. I'm still not sure whether the author means for her protagonist and family to "actually" be seeing and hearing spirits, or if the implication is that they're mentally ill, but I would really like that cleared up. Also, I find it very difficult to like any of the characters in this book, including Noble/Celeste, our narrator. Mama is mean and controlling, Noble/Celeste is weak and whiny, Dave is completely clueless, Betsy (Dave's daughter) is spoiled and nasty, and Baby Celeste is just creepy. Even so, I want nice things to happen to them, but this being V.C. Andrews, that'll never happen. It was a sad day when this lady died. I do believe that her ghost writer Andrew Neiderman has done a fantastic job. This series to me is one of the better ones it feels more believable as far as characters and plot. Although I'm hard-pressed to find a series that I don't like by this author most stay in the 'just fiction' part of my brain this series feels more like this person is real and this really happened, like a memoir. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Still maintaining her guise as her deceased brother Noble, Celeste struggles to raise Baby Celeste, a child she is forced to deny as her own, but when her mother marries a kindly neighbor, vicious enemies threaten to reveal the truth. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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