New England White
โ Scribed by Carter, Stephen L
- Book ID
- 107098270
- Publisher
- Vintage
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 393 KB
- Series
- Elm Harbor 2
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 0099437465
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Turpin's reading of Carter's second novel is sublime. In a book where each character's race is important, capturing that fact for the ear alone is a balancing act to be taken quite seriously. The story opens with a body found on the roadside by Julia Carlyle and her university president husband, Lemaster (both had minor roles in Carter's The Emperor of Ocean Park). It turns out to be an ex-lover of Julia's and a possible blackmailer of Lemaster. What ensues is a gripping tale of race, murder, politics, conspiracy theory and secret societies that revolves around a 30-year-old case involving a dead white girl and an accused, now dead, black attacker. Turpin's prowess in the aural world is apparent, not only when nailing regional accents but in much more subtle ways, like a conversation between two women of roughly the same age who are clearly distinguishable from each other by one's slight smoker's rasp. The story is literate and fast-paced, and Turpin's well-rounded characters keep the fire fueled.
Copyright ยฉ Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Featuring the setting and two minor characters from his best-selling debut novel, The Emperor of Ocean Park , Stephen L. Carter has crafted a literary thriller peppered with shrewd observations about wealth, power, race, culture, and politics. Several critics were disappointed with the murder mystery, citing a melodramatic plot with too many characters. However, the Washington Post declared, "Let's be honest: No one should read a Carter novel for the mystery." Indeed, Carter's astute dissection of the upper-class black milieu and his scathing portrait of the subtly racist community surrounding the university shine brightest, offering a compelling exploration of ethics and power. Fans of his first novel will certainly welcome his second.
Copyright ยฉ 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Publishers Weekly *Starred Review.* Turpin's reading of Carter's second novel is sublime. In a book where each character's race is important, capturing that fact for the ear alone is a balancing act to be taken quite seriously. The story opens with a body found on the roadside by Julia Car
In the mid-'70s, a time of great social upheaval in the United States and the world, a group of men from a small New England coastal town disappear on a sailboat en route to Bermuda. A year later, the families of the missing crew gather on Easter Sunday for a memorial. For Lulu, the protagonist whos