![]() ![]() The physical and emotional passions of the characters keep the stakes high and the pages turning, making this a powerful exploration of slavery and reformation on Barbados. The narrative alternates between the period of 1812–18: in the earlier age, ardent battles for love and land shape the future, while in 1854, Emily struggles to rebuild and run a plantation, but she’s filled with the same uncertainty that underlies her attempts to understand hidden details of her family line. Mary Anne marries and becomes pregnant, and soon Jenny is expecting as well, but lineages are questioned and, in Jenny’s case, shrouded with mystery. The story then reaches back to 1812, when connections between the plantation families and their slaves are gradually revealed through the relationships of landowners such as Mary Anne Beckles, as well as Mary Anne’s maid Jenny. Nathaniel Braithright, the nephew of a wealthy freedman, by proclaiming her inheritance of the nearby derelict sugar plantation called Peverills. Emily Dawson has arrived in Barbados from England, and she surprises her new neighbor Dr. ![]() ![]() ![]() I do love the way she ends one chapter that picks up in the other time period seamlessly. Rich settings, romantic intrigue, and engaging characters will draw readers into this dramatic epic of estate owners and slavery in 19th-century colonial Barbados from Willig ( The English Wife). The story alternates between her earlier ancestors time in the Regency era when slavery was at its last gasps in the British colony and Emilys attempt to understand why her grandfather left her this ruin. ![]()
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