Community Reviews

Rating(4.1 / 5.0, 34 votes)
5 stars
13(38%)
4 stars
11(32%)
3 stars
10(29%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
34 reviews
April 26,2025
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fairly fun but can be a bit trite. i like the double stories that interrelate (kind of like possession). the writing isn't the best though, and i'd have to say that possession is a much better read.
April 26,2025
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I am really glad I read this book. The prose was beautiful. The characters, while interesting, were not all compelling, with the exceptions of Addie and Jarry. I could have done with less of the voodoo, which confused me.
April 26,2025
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I finally gave up on this book. I liked the premise: the aging rock star trying to turn his life and marriage around, and the civil war story interspersed with the modern story, but I just couldn't get into it. There are too many books out there to spend time reading something I don't like.
April 26,2025
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It's been awhile, but from what I can recall, this is a very good book.. I am excited to re-read!
April 26,2025
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This story is split into two parts: 1) modern time with the story of a has-been rock star who follows his estranged wife and kids to her childhood estate in the South and 2) the people/slaves who worked the estate when it was a plantation in the 1860s. The 1860s part of the story is much more interesting and the characters have much more to say.
April 26,2025
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This books fits my usually fun theme of two stories told on a subject across the centuries. While parts were certainly interesting, this was more fluff than substance and I wouldn't necessarily recomment it.
April 26,2025
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I borrowed this audiobook from the library. I am not enjoying it at all but continue to torture myself by refusing to shut the darn thing off until the last word is read. It's about a selfish, self-absorbed, washed-up, bigoted man who returns home to Wando Passo (his estranged wife's family estate) after he has the epiphany that he still loves his wife. In reality, I think he just didn't know what else to do and had run out of willing women to bed. For some bizarre reason she takes him back even though she doesn't appear to like him very much because he cheated, drank and never provided for them. Maybe she did it for the little kids they share? If it were me I would've let the door hit him square in a*s on the way out but I'm mean like that. Anyway, here he comes all expecting to be greeted with open arms but things don't work out quite that way. They fight, he embarrasses himself with his racial slurs against his wife's best male friend, and they fight some more. The book then flashes back to the wife's ancestors (sorry, I'm horrid with names) who were living at Wando Passo during racial tensions and civil unrest. Here we meet Abigail (or Addi?), a naive new bride who realizes the man she married (without knowing) is quite a beastly man and not in the "cool, he's a werewolf" kind of plot twist either. He's a bigot, jealous of his half black brother and thoroughly unlikable. She's struggling with her mistake and submits to him out of propriety but is filled with dread. The book then alternates back and forth between these two depressing storylines. There is no reprieve and still I continue on . . .

Later: Well, I'm almost glad I plodded on because the characters are rounded out quite a bit more and aren't as one dimensional as they seemed at the beginning of the book. Ran (the washed up loser dad) suffers from bipolar and is off his meds which explains much of his behavior. It is Claire, his wife, who actually becomes a bit more of an unlikable character. Well, it's a toss up really because both of these people do things that annoyed me. A murder mystery and some voodoo/hoodoo/witchcraft is thrown in to liven things up which works for me because all of the daily drama was becoming a bore. Back in the past Addie struggles with life as a plantation owner and faces many ethical dilemmas, including her growing feelings for her husband's half brother. It's pretty engrossing but she too makes choices that annoy me.

I should also note that there is too large section of this book written in another language (Spanish, I think) without a translation. It was difficult to make heads or tails of the scenes because it's been over 20 years since I took Spanish.

Later still: Am finally finished and thoroughly exhausted. The mystery ended as I thought it might and the modern day triangle wasn't as prettied up in the end as I thought it might. Overall a sometimes engrossing, sometimes infuriating read. It's not a book I'd read again by choice.
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