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A Million Nightingales (2007)

A Million Nightingales (2007)

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Rating
3.9 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
140009559X (ISBN13: 9781400095599)
Language
English
Publisher
anchor

About book A Million Nightingales (2007)

An interior novel that would work very well as an audio book. Perhaps I think that because I heard the author read a short passage from it and her rendering was very moving. (At times I could still 'hear' the author's voice while I was reading.) Maybe I think it because some of the connections the narrator makes in her somewhat stream-of-consciousness telling might not sound as repetitive in an audio as they sometimes look to be on the page. But that is a minor issue. Moinette's story (loosely based on court records that the author found that deal with a 'free woman of color' buying her son) is told with admirable empathy and was one I wanted to come back to when I had to put it down. Being from Louisiana, I found it interesting and important from a historical viewpoint. Much as with Holocaust stories, there may already be many fictional narratives from this time period (slavery), but that doesn't mean there aren't many unique, important stories still to be told.I wasn't surprised to learn (from the acknowledgments) that one of the author's inspirations was Intimate Enemies: The Two Worlds of the Baroness De Pontalba. I thought of that nonfiction book immediately while reading what happens to one of Moinette's owners.

Early 1800's: Moinette (black slave mother, unknown white father)lives on a plantation south of New Orleans in a small hut with her mother, the washer woman. Her mother is her best friend and Moinette is her mother's universe, but Moinette is about to turn fourteen -- the year a slave girl comes of age for breeding. She, however, is sent to the big house to be the personal slave of the daughter of the plantation. Cephaline is obsessed with reading and writing and is not Scarlett O'Hara, by any means. As a result of her association with Cephaline, Moinette learns to read -- a skill she hides from nearly everyone. Cephaline dies and Moinette's life is altered in ways she never dreamed. The story follows her travels from the plantation, fleeing for freedom, being sold to other plantation owners and, finally, establishing herself as business woman. This is based on a true story. The writing is superb; we see life from Moinette's point of view and exist inside her thoughts and observations. I highly recommend this book.

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I labored through this but kept going. I found the writing style disjointed and had a hard time keeping track of characters. I just wanted more story with this. More background and personality of characters and less description of blood this and blood that, I got tired of the main character Moinette's constantly referring to people as animal, flesh, skin, bone.....I think a little of that goes a long way and we get the point. I would like to try another of her books because I would like to see how the dialogue differs from this one. Maybe one set in modern times. I will definitely give another book a try. Just wasn't crazy about this one.
—Lori

As the story begins, Moinette is a 14-year-old slave on a Louisiana plantation. She is "yellow" (i.e., of mixed race), and has always lived with only her mother in le quartier (slave quarters), but is one day moved into the main house to be the personal handmaiden and hairdresser to the owner's teenage daughter, Céphaline. When Céphaline succumbs to disease, Moinette is only a reminder to her parents of their loss, and without warning Moinette is uprooted from the only life she has known.Many nights I did not get enough sleep because, while reading in bed, I simply could not stop reading. There are many, many bite-sized sections within each chapter, each tantalizingly entreating, Oh, you know you have time to read just one more tiny, tiny piece! Look how small the next passage is! (repeat 53x) I appreciated the author's skill at storytelling in such a way that I was unable to guess what was going to happen next -- that I was even conscious of this made me aware of how even original plots are often somewhat transparent. A Million Nightingales is heartbreaking, but Moinette also has her triumphs, small and large.
—Julia

I read this book for both good and ridiculous reasons, but I am really glad that I did.Ridiculous: I recently read the third book in the trilogy Between Heaven and Here. I'm a completist, so I don't read books out of order and I read all of them.Good: I really enjoyed Between Heaven and Here and wanted to find out the stories that occur before and after. (The third book chronologically falls between the first and second books.)Ridiculous/Good: I discovered the GoodReads "most read" authors list feature and was embarrassed by 1) how few female authors were on the list, 2) how low they were in the rankings (first ones were tied for 22nd and that included J.K. Rowling), and 3) how high James Patterson was on the list (tied for 5th). So, I am working on getting some strong female representation in the top 10 (e.g. Margaret Atwood, Patricia Highsmith, and possibly Susan Straight).The not as good: I thought the ending of the story felt rushed and took a few too many dark turns: (view spoiler)[syphilitic rape and the pointless death of her son (hide spoiler)]
—Hans

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