Rating: Summary: Blanche is at it again She indeed Passes Go Review: Barbara Neeley in Blanche Passes Go has yet written another supurb black feminist text. What makes this so well written is you don't realize the issues are so deep and multi leveled as you are in the process of reading the book. She is able to give many classic examples of class race and sex in terms of abuse of the black american women. She also has the ability to bring you in to the mystery even if mystery is not your favorate spear. She has dead folks all around with, Carolina catering recipes abounding in the book my mouth was watering. She solves a mystery but more importanly, why do men abuse women? Rape, physical as well as mental abuse are also examined. The silence these women must suffer are explored. Read it is great.
Rating: Summary: Blanche is at it again She indeed Passes Go Review: Barbara Neeley in Blanche Passes Go has yet written another supurb black feminist text. What makes this so well written is you don't realize the issues are so deep and multi leveled as you are in the process of reading the book. She is able to give many classic examples of class race and sex in terms of abuse of the black american women. She also has the ability to bring you in to the mystery even if mystery is not your favorate spear. She has dead folks all around with, Carolina catering recipes abounding in the book my mouth was watering. She solves a mystery but more importanly, why do men abuse women? Rape, physical as well as mental abuse are also examined. The silence these women must suffer are explored. Read it is great.
Rating: Summary: refreshingly different Review: Barbara Neely has created a refreshingly different, unconventional detective in Blanche White. Blanche is a large, very dark woman who refuses to be limited by the conventions of culture, whether black or white. She strives to be her own person, to know her own mind and heart, and to find ethical solutions to the dilemmas in her life, even if those solutions are outside standard operating procedures.I recently discovered Neely's Blanche, and I've devoured all the books in the series. These are entertaining tales, filled with life-wisdom, laughter, and mouth-watering descriptions of good meals prepared and eaten. Blanche is a brand-new character in mystery fiction. Invest some time in getting to know her!
Rating: Summary: refreshingly different Review: Barbara Neely has created a refreshingly different, unconventional detective in Blanche White. Blanche is a large, very dark woman who refuses to be limited by the conventions of culture, whether black or white. She strives to be her own person, to know her own mind and heart, and to find ethical solutions to the dilemmas in her life, even if those solutions are outside standard operating procedures. I recently discovered Neely's Blanche, and I've devoured all the books in the series. These are entertaining tales, filled with life-wisdom, laughter, and mouth-watering descriptions of good meals prepared and eaten. Blanche is a brand-new character in mystery fiction. Invest some time in getting to know her!
Rating: Summary: This should be on your summer reading list. Review: Blanche is truly a self confident woman. She doesn't take any mess yet still shows the everyday human frailties we all possess. Barbara Neely's characters are well written from Blanche, the main character, to the culprit. Each is just complex enough to be believeable. In this second in the Blance series, Ms. Neely continues her easy and inviting pace that keeps the reader wondering and wanting more. A definite page turner!
Rating: Summary: This should be on your summer reading list. Review: Blanche is truly a self confident woman. She doesn't take any mess yet still shows the everyday human frailties we all possess. Barbara Neely's characters are well written from Blanche, the main character, to the culprit. Each is just complex enough to be believeable. In this second in the Blance series, Ms. Neely continues her easy and inviting pace that keeps the reader wondering and wanting more. A definite page turner!
Rating: Summary: This Book is a Marvel Review: Glory Be! Success has not spoiled Barbara Neely. This newouting for Blanche is even richer and and more powerful than the previous books. And funny, too. Girlfriend can WRITE. What I marvel over with this book is that Neely can tackle serious topics without hectoring or even lecturing. Blanche reflects on racial tensions, class divisions, gender inequality, the horrible legacy of rape--but not in a dry, intellectualized way. It all comes from Blanche's big heart and questioning mind. Neely makes her a woman you'd love to sit and talk to for hours (though maybe not at her momma's house). I won't talk about the plot because other people will do that, but let me say that this book isn't just a fine mystery novel, it's important, and it's deep. This is a book to share with family and friends. Lev Raphael, author of LITTLE MISS EVIL...
Rating: Summary: This Book is a Marvel Review: Glory Be! Success has not spoiled Barbara Neely. This newouting for Blanche is even richer and and more powerful than the previous books. And funny, too. Girlfriend can WRITE. What I marvel over with this book is that Neely can tackle serious topics without hectoring or even lecturing. Blanche reflects on racial tensions, class divisions, gender inequality, the horrible legacy of rape--but not in a dry, intellectualized way. It all comes from Blanche's big heart and questioning mind. Neely makes her a woman you'd love to sit and talk to for hours (though maybe not at her momma's house). I won't talk about the plot because other people will do that, but let me say that this book isn't just a fine mystery novel, it's important, and it's deep. This is a book to share with family and friends. Lev Raphael, author of LITTLE MISS EVIL...
Rating: Summary: Collect [money amount] Review: I am no mystery lover. I think I overdosed on Nancy Drew when I was growing up and seeing as how I am not now nor ever was a blue-eyed titian haired rich girl, I wish Blanche had been around even then. I adore the respect of The Ancestors the author injects into each of the Blanche tales and the ease that she allows the story to unfold. It's as if the story writes itself. This was anything but predictable and formulaic. What held me is that throughout the book I often forgot there was something sinister going on. The author used the south as a backdrop and the attitudes and notions that are still very much alive today served as a captivating and thoughtful undercurrent. I think Blanche is here to stay.
Rating: Summary: Blanche Passes Go Review: She's baaaaack! And, thankfully, ignoring the popular litany to "let go and let God," Blanche White takes a more assertive self-help route to achieve the relief she seeks. Thus begins her trek towards "go." Blanche has put a temporary hold on taking care of other folks, their homes, and their often shady business. Returning to Farleigh, NC, the hometown from which she fled years earlier, she's got one thing in mind: revenge. Her target? A rich and powerful man who robbed her in a most heinous way. Before it's all over with, he's gotten what he had coming and Blanche's fingerprints are nowhere in sight. At first friends and family actually think Blanche is just home for a little R&R from her Boston grind. (As if!) And, by the time they figure out that she's involved in way more than that, dead bodies are popping up all over and some not-so-holy alliances, with Blanche's able assistance, have come completely undone. Always moving on several fronts at once, Blanche holds true to form this time too. Along the route to a bittersweet conclusion, she helps her best friend, Ardell, cater to the rich and famous; she uncovers a hidden part of her own mother's life in exchange for the telling of her own painful secret; and she begins preparing a way for her return home for good once her young charges, Taifa and Malik, no longer need her in Boston. The end? Not quite. Having sashayed up to romance early on in BLANCHE PASSES GO, this time Blanche decides to hold onto it and onto Thelvin, the hardworking brother who's too happy to keep her in good supply. But there are things that have to be worked out: personal boundaries to negotiate, issues of possession, jealousy and plain old fear to be put to rest. Sometimes Thelvin is riding the rails as a train conductor and other times he's just riding Blanche's one good nerve. Holding the mirror up to her own luscious self time and again, though, Blanche finally admits that there is work to be done on both sides. And as if that weren't enough, in a classic display of empowered community action, Blanche and her neighbors embrace three young cookie-lovers trapped in a cycle of domestic violence and despair. After touching on the effectiveness of remedies involving frying pans against sleeping batterer's heads, Blanche and her neighbors help the hapless mother and daughters free themselves. Blanche finally passes go, but you know she won't stay gone for long. And, child honey, ain't we glad!
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