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∎ PDF Gratis The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books

The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books



Download As PDF : The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books

Download PDF The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books


The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books

Margaret Cezair-Thompson has created several multifaceted families and a delicious Jamaica in The Pirate's Daughter. After an intriguing opening and moving first half, the novel which offered much to suggest it was not entirely fictional, began to drag for me. On several occasions, the shifts between Jamaican dialect and non-Jamaican became annoying and confusing. I found myself needing to re-read several passages to be sure I wasn't thinking I'd read words spoken by Ida in May's voice, thus stopping the rhythm of the story. This was a new author to me and I was very excited with the structure at first, then found myself simply determined to finish the book rather than experiencing the excitement I'd initially felt each time I picked up the Kindle to continue. The novel was indeed good enough that I wanted to finish, it just wasn't as enticing during the last third. Most of the characters were well constructed and some were more likable than others, but the book missed a little something for me.

Read The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books

Tags : The Pirate's Daughter [Margaret Cezair-Thompson] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <div>“Back in America, little was known of my life in Jamaica, ” wrote Errol Flynn.<BR><BR>In 1946,Margaret Cezair-Thompson,The Pirate's Daughter,Unbridled Books,1932961402,Literary,Flynn, Errol,Historical fiction,Historical fiction.,Jamaica,Jamaica;Fiction.,Mothers and daughters,Mothers and daughters;Fiction.,Literature & Fiction,1909-1959,CARIBBEAN NOVEL AND SHORT STORY IN ENGLISH,Caribbean,FICTION Historical General,FICTION Literary,Fiction,Fiction - Historical,Fiction General,Fiction-Coming of Age,Fiction-General,Flynn, Errol,,GENERAL,General Adult,Historical - General,United States

The Pirate Daughter Margaret CezairThompson 9781932961409 Books Reviews


Exciting and an interesting read.
Read this while on vacation in Jamaica. Totally understand the characters love of this island country. Enjoyed learning more about the history and culture. Great story.
Just as captivating today as when I read it many years ago.
This is a story about Errol Flynn.........not so much. It's more about his one-time love interest and if you know that it's an interesting tale. I enjoyed reading it, especially the parts in Jamaica. Richly describes the people, the island, etc Keeps you interested and looking for more.
I've read this book several times and it's never failed to move me. The story is poignant, sharp, intoxicating and nostalgic. It reminds me so much of growing up in the Caribbean. I can't wait to read more from the author.
When I first learnt of this book, I thought it was non-fiction. I have been wondering ever since if in fact the story of May is true and would love to know.

The book is quite gripping and a page turner (after the first few chapters). I am disgusted by Errol Flynn and went on to read online biographies about him to see what was in fact truth in the book. Of course, being a Jamaican and knowing Navy Island, I did know that part was true.

The biographies also confirmed that he is in fact a pedophile and had he been living today, he probably would be sharing a jail cell with that other disgusting man they recently arrested in Switzerland - is it Polanski.

Good story though!!
This wonderful book takes a wide view; it spans cultures and generations, and it conveys the sensuous and seductive beauty of the island paradise of Jamaica. And it tells the story of two beautiful women -- Ida who in her teens becomes the lover of Errol Flynn and bears him an illegitimate child, and that daughter May, who grows up a little wild but who also reveals herself by the end of the book to be capable of fierce and redemptive loyalty. The writing is as seductive as the story.

Cezair-Thompson knows just where to place a metaphor to evoke a vivid sense of place -- whether that be through the deafening sound of rain on a corrugated zinc roof or the view of the dark night sky billowing above like a sheet of cloth -- but her writing is restrained, not overloaded, and the style never interferes with the compelling story she is telling. She is also a virtuoso with the Jamaican dialect, and (as in her first book -- The True History of Paradise) she slips effortlessly in and out of a dazzling range of linguistic registers.

"The Pirate's Daughter" raises fascinating questions about identity and belonging, and never far below the surface are serious issues of race and class. But Cezair-Thompson never preaches. She has the restraint to allow political questions to weave through the book in a way that is provocative but not simplistic. Her characters have complex racial identities but they are never reduced to them, and they contradict their own principles in ways that mirror the complex histories and behaviors of real people.

This book is a shimmering delight to read. I wish someone would make it into a movie. The glamour and beauty of the characters and the story (and the book's sheer sense of style) belong on the screen. One of the most pleasurable reading experiences I've had in a long time.
Margaret Cezair-Thompson has created several multifaceted families and a delicious Jamaica in The Pirate's Daughter. After an intriguing opening and moving first half, the novel which offered much to suggest it was not entirely fictional, began to drag for me. On several occasions, the shifts between Jamaican dialect and non-Jamaican became annoying and confusing. I found myself needing to re-read several passages to be sure I wasn't thinking I'd read words spoken by Ida in May's voice, thus stopping the rhythm of the story. This was a new author to me and I was very excited with the structure at first, then found myself simply determined to finish the book rather than experiencing the excitement I'd initially felt each time I picked up the to continue. The novel was indeed good enough that I wanted to finish, it just wasn't as enticing during the last third. Most of the characters were well constructed and some were more likable than others, but the book missed a little something for me.
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