The Pirate's Daughter

The Pirate's Daughter

by Margaret Cezair - Thompson (Author)

Synopsis

An unforgettable story of love and adventure, spanning three decades of Jamaican history. Jamaica, 1946. Errol Flynn washes up on the island in the Zaca, his storm-wrecked yacht. Ida Joseph, the teenaged daughter of a Port Antonio Justice of the Peace, is intrigued to learn that the 'World's Handsomest Man' is on the island, and makes it her business to meet him. For the jaded swashbuckler, Jamaica is a tropical paradise that offers the tang of adventure and the promise of personal salvation: a freshness that Ida, unfazed as she is by his celebrity, seems to share. Soon Flynn has made a home for himself on Navy Island where he entertains the cream of Hollywood -- and Ida has set her heart on this charismatic older man. Ida's child, May, will meet her famous father only once. The Pirate's Daughter is a tale of passion and recklessness, of two generations of women and their battles for love and survival, and of a nation struggling to rise to the challenge of hard-won independence. Margaret Cezair-Thompson has fashioned a novel at once provocative, refreshingly original and as spellbinding as even the richest haul of pirate treasure.

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Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 448
Publisher: Headline Review
Published: 01 Nov 2007

ISBN 10: 0755343573
ISBN 13: 9780755343577

Media Reviews
'A surprising yarn that is rich, salty and ultimately satisfying... sparkles with characters real and imagined' -- Washington Post 'Imagine that you are a beautiful 13-year-old Jamaican girl. Imagine that Errol Flynn washes up near your town in his schooner after a hurricane... This is the delicious premise that sets The Pirate's Daughter in motion, and from there, the novel never stops for breath' -- O magazine
Author Bio
Margaret Cezair-Thompson was born and raised in Jamaica, West Indies. Her first novel, the acclaimed The True History of Paradise, was published in 1999, and was shortlisted for the IMPAC Award. She is a professor of English at Wellesley College, and lives in Massachusetts.