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Loading... Angel of Brooklyn (2008)by Janette Jenkins
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Acclaimed writer Janette Jenkins brings us an ambitious and tragic tale of love and war, which shows the past can never be forgotten... It is January, 1914 and Jonathan Crane returns home from his travels with a new American bride, former Coney Island showgirl Beatrice. In the remote Lancashire village Beatrice is the focus of attention, the men captivated by her beauty, the women initially charmed by tales of her upbringing in Normal, Illinois with her father, an amateur taxidermist, and her brother, a preacher, although she will take the story of how she became the Angel of Brooklyn to her grave. But when the men head off to fight in the Great War the glamorous newcomer slowly becomes an object of suspicion and jealousy for the women who are left behind and as the years pass, and their resentment grows, Beatrice's secret proves to be her undoing. Beautifully observed, tragic, funny and so evocative that you can taste the candy floss at Coney Island and feel the chill of wartime England, Angel of Brooklyn is an extraordinary, heartbreaking story. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The story sort of meanders back and forth between wartime in the UK and Beatrice's previous life in the States, with the flashback chapters written in various styles, such as '10 things ...' lists. I was fairly bored to begin with, I must confess, not understanding where the plot was leading, if anywhere. There are a couple of startling events, but nothing for Beatrice to 'overcome' in the end, which might be frustrating for some, but was actually refreshing for this type of novel.
I did enjoy the descriptions of Brooklyn and Coney Island, which was primarily why I chose this book, but compared to the drama of Beatrice in New York, the chapters in Lancashire feel unreal and fall horribly short, which is perhaps the intention (even though the author is from Bolton). I wish Beatrice had dropped her cardboard husband into the Atlantic and stayed in the States, but hey ho. ( )