Simone
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2.5 • 2 Ratings
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
In the year 1930, the community of Potluck, Louisiana is one of divided lines - not of black and white, but of the haves and the have-nots. Of the residents of Potluck was one Simone Tout, a young woman of twenty years born an only child to a father who started the town school and a mother, Berta, who was proudly employed as a cook in the mayor's kitchen.
Two men - one you love, one you hate.
Georges Andrieux, the handsome, well-educated son of the mayor, is a man that Simone despises - a man who is more than aggressive in his determination to make Simone his wife. Berta of course is thrilled, but against her mother's wishes the headstrong Simone has plans of her own in the form of Cotton Neal, a young man who Berta considers as nothing more than a common thug, jailbird, and bootlegger from the wrong side of the tracks.
"Ain't nothing but a bunch of wild ass negros up in them hills..."
But to Simone, Cotton is the air she breathes - her future husband and the love of her life.
While Simone and Cotton prepare to run away together, the owner of a local opium den is found floating face down in the river. When Cotton is blamed for the murder he disappears, and while law enforcement work vigilantly to apprehend him, Simone is left to endure Georges' bitter, violent form of jealousy. When he threatens to reveal Cotton's whereabouts, Simone finally falls into his trap as he uses blackmail as a form of revenge.
Toni...
You run away only to have your car break down on the side of the road. You accidentally murder the mother of a good samaritan...
The events that follow will change the lives of each woman forever.
Customer Reviews
The author knows how to tell a story
I'd give this book a solid 3.5 starts.
This author does know how to tell a story. The novel is short, fast paced, and grim with excellent dialogue accents and use of descriptions to set the scenes and personalities of the characters.
She does a very good job of bringing us to the South and all that it entailed during that era. It is a struggle from page one to the end for all of the characters. The number of characters, the pacing and size of the book make it difficult to become invested in many of the characters, and I like to become invested in the characters, so if an author takes their time to let the story unfold I'm o.k. with that. If you prefer shorter, grim, depressing stories, you will like this book despite some of its hiccups.
I give it a 3.5 stars instead of a solid 4 due to inconsistent formatting, which made it difficult to follow the story at times, and on occasions having to backtrack to see if I missed something due to an incorrect word. I don't want to work to hard at reading a book.