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Adult Books - Fiction - General Fiction
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Prospero’s Daughter.
Nunez, Elizabeth (author).
Feb. 2006. 336p. Ballantine, hardcover, $24.95 (0-345-45535-5).
REVIEW.
First published November 15, 2005 (Booklist).
Through one family’s unique circumstances, the always-eloquent Nunez invokes larger themes of race, class, and colonialism. In the late 1950s, mad scientist Peter Gardner flees England to escape charges that he experimented on his patients. He and his young daughter, Virginia, settle on an isolated leper colony off the coast of Trinidad. They soon take over the house of a mixed-race orphan, Carlos, who was left in the care of a dying housekeeper. Gardner imposes a strict regimen on the household; trumpets the superiority of the white race; alternately treats Carlos as a slave and as an experiment by educating him about music, literature, and science; and devotes extraordinary amounts of time to cultivating hybrid flowers. His daughter, Virginia, responds to Carlos’ great kindness and patience, and their abiding friendship, carried out in secret, blossoms into a love affair that threatens Gardner’s worldview and puts the couple in danger. Although the enthralling story line loses some power in the final section, Nunez has crafted a beautiful, layered novel that echoes both The Tempest and Heart of Darkness. Joanne Wilkinson
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