Caribbean

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English

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"A grand epic."THE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALERMaster storyteller James A. Michener sweeps us off to the Caribbean,with a magnificent novel that captures the eternal allure of that glittering string of islands and their tumultuous history. Beginning in 1310 and continuing through Columbus's arrival and the bloody slave revolt of Haiti to the rise of Castro, CARIBBEAN carries us through 700 dramatic years in a tale teeming with revolution and romance, slavery and superstition, heartfelt characters and thunderous destinies. A Dual Main Slection of the Book-of-the-Month ClubFrom the Paperback edition.

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ISBN
9780394565613
9781101922446

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A view of the empire at sunset - Phillips, Caryl
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David A. Kaufelt's historical fiction may satisfy James A. Michener's fans. Kaufelt weaves history and fictional characters into a saga more concise and less detailed than Michener fans might expect, but he covers similar social and political issues through the lives of his characters. -- Katherine Johnson
Australian Colleen McCullough and American James A. Michener write dramatic historical fiction set in a wide variety of places, from eighteenth-century Australia (McCullough) to fifteenth-century Zimbabwe (Michener). Both effectively combine large swathes of history with sweeping family sagas brought to life through a strong sense of place borne of meticulous research. -- Mike Nilsson
James A. Michener and Kiana Davenport write novels set in Hawaii. Davenport's stories incorporate more folklore and myth and have more poetic descriptions than Michener's; weaving fact-filled history and digressions about politics, disease, and race, using a vivid, almost lush prose style and clear-eyed depiction of Hawaii's past and present. -- Katherine Johnson
Edward Rutherfurd and James A. Michener write thoroughly researched historical sagas that follow a few families' lives over the history of a chosen locale. Their sagas include informative dips into geology and geography as well as anthropology, politics, and economics. -- Katherine Johnson
Fans of James A. Michener's historical sagas will want to try Frank Delaney. Both write layered sagas that delve deeply into the complexities of human relationships entwined with geography, economic development, and other historical factors. Delaney uses a story-within-a-story technique that winds history around an ongoing narrative. -- Katherine Johnson
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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

The Caribbean islands, which have seen pirates, bloody slave revolts and the Cuban revolution, are chronicled in this blend of fiction and history. ``While the pace is sometimes achingly slow, the dialogue stilted and the characterization skimpy, Michener laces the whole with fiery Caribbean drama,'' PW remarked. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Kirkus Book Review

Is anywhere on earth safe from Michener's roving eye? His latest conquest, the Caribbean Sea and its two dozen major islands, presents a typical clash of cultures--native Caribbean, Spanish, French, British, Rastaferian, American (or norteamericano, as one character admonishes)--that go on clashing for 700 pages. The generational approach of Michener's earliest books doesn't work here because the canvas is too broad and the time-span (1310-1989) too long. What we're given instead is essentially a series of longish short stories about characters who express the contradictions of the region and are usually destroyed by them: Bakmu, the peaceful Arawak whose prowess in games doesn't protect him from Caribe cannibals; real-life explorers Christopher Columbus, John Hawkins, and Francis Drake; Cavalier partisan Isaac Tatum, his Roundhead brother Will, and their privateer nephew Ned Pennyfeather; Paul Lanzerac and Solange Vauclain, guillotined by the Revolution; free-colored Xavier and Julie Pr‚mord, caught between Haitian blacks who distrust them and Haitain whites who despise them; Ranjit Banarjee, victim of his attempts to keep US officials from sending him back to Trinidad; and Cuban ‚migr‚s Steve and Kate Calderon, whose small attempt to open diplomatic lines with Fidel Castro are met with summary justice. As usual in Michener, some family names are repeated, and the cruise in the final chapter brings together descendants of many of the earlier characters; also as usual, sledgehammer foreshadowing and repetitious moralizing take the place of thematic development. Michener is always Michener: this almanac in narrative form will give his huge following a lot of new information painlessly without putting them through any deeply imagined fictional experience. (Endpaper maps, not seen). Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

The Caribbean islands, which have seen pirates, bloody slave revolts and the Cuban revolution, are chronicled in this blend of fiction and history. ``While the pace is sometimes achingly slow, the dialogue stilted and the characterization skimpy, Michener laces the whole with fiery Caribbean drama,'' PW remarked. (Feb.) Copyright 1990 Cahners Business Information.

Copyright 1990 Cahners Business Information.
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