Vulture: The Private Life of an Unloved Bird
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Turkey vultures, the most widely distributed and abundant scavenging birds of prey on the planet,...
Rooftop Garden Design
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This richly illustrated book provides a comprehensive guide to contemporary trends in rooftop garden...
Shigeru Ban
Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson, Claude Bruderlein and Shigeru Ban
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"Architects are not building temporary housing because we are too busy building for the privileged...
A Very Private Celebrity: The Nine Lives of John Freeman
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John Freeman was one of Britain's most extraordinary public figures for over half a century; an...
As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning
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As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning is a beautiful and moving follow-up to Laurie Lee's acclaimed...
William Faulkner in Hollywood: Screenwriting for the Studios
R. Barton Palmer, Stefan Solomon and Matthew Bernstein
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During more than two decades (1932-1954), William Faulkner worked on approximately fifty screenplays...
Mr Lynch's Holiday
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Mr Lynch's Holiday is the charming and comic new novel by the bestselling and prize-winning author...
ClareR (5721 KP) rated The Vanishing Half in Books
Jul 8, 2020
It’s a story about secrets, lies and reinvention - the sacrifices someone has to make in order to get the life they want. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t.
Stella and Desirée Vignes are identical twin sisters, brought up in a small southern town, where all the inhabitants are black people who could pass for white people if they wanted to (which a very dangerous thing to try and do at the time the story is set).
The twins escape together, and then Stella leaves Desirée. Stella discovers that she can pass as white, and marries a wealthy white man, who knows nothing of her origins. Desirée marries a black man who beats her, and so she escapes back to her mother with her dark skinned daughter, Jude. Jude is never accepted in Desirée’s home town of Mallard, and so she leaves to go to university as soon as she is able to.
This is where Jude’s life unwittingly intersects with that of Stella’s daughter, and secrets that have been kept for so long, are brought out into the open.
I loved everything about this book. The characters and their motivations, the storyline, the way the book was written - everything! I could see why Stella did what she did, and how she felt trapped by her choices, and it’s a great example of how prejudice and racism works in the USA - and potentially here in the UK as well.
I really do highly recommend this book. It’s such a great story that kept me engaged from start to finish. I have to admit to reading it slower to make it last longer - it’s a book that I’ll be recommending to my friends, that’s for sure!
The Wines of Northern Spain: From Galicia to the Pyrenees and Rioja to the Basque Country
Book
There's no doubt about it, Spain is the most exciting country in Europe when it comes to wine. As...
Damned Nation: Hell in America from the Revolution to Reconstruction
Book
Among the pressing concerns of Americans in the first century of nationhood were day-to-day...