276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Colour Blind

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Following the life of Rose Mary, readers witness racism in the 1950s and the destruction it causes, how ignorance ruins entire families. Towards the end, Rose Mary has a choice between two men that love her and want her no matter her race. (I still have my doubts about the one tho..) The Abortion Act was passed in 1967 and was obviously of interest to Catherine Cookson, a pioneer of women's issues. Another indicator of the year: Max Bygraves 'Tulips From Amsterdam' 78 rpm was #3 in 1958, I now have an urge to watch Jean Anderson in The Brothers if a higher quality version could be found! At the age of 34 (June 1940), Catherine married Tom Cookson. He was a teacher at Hastings Grammar School. She experienced four miscarriages before learning that she suffered from telangiectasia, a rare vascular disease that could result in anemia. A considerable portion of Catherine Cookson’s books have been adapted into films, radio and stage plays. Jacqueline (1956), which was directed by Roy Ward Baker, was the first film to be produced from her work, based off of ‘A Grand Man’.

Hateful of each other, their neighbors and, inevitably, the newest addition to their family, readers are provided a first hand glimpse into racism in the 1950s, the destruction it unleashed and the families it destroyed. Anyone that thinks of this novel as little more than fluffy romance will be surprised by the depth they discover. The plot of the book was gripping and made you think. There was plenty of action. The stakes were high. I was satisfied with the ending but would have preferred if Bridget and James's reunion was shown. Also I feel like Matt did not get his proper comeuppance, despite the fact he was killed. I hoped for final standoff between him and Bridget in which she made it clear to his twisted mind that she wanted nothing to do with him. This new addition to the family comes about when Bridget marries him. When she brings him home, she discovers she cannot take the hateful stares, comments, and remarks and she turns to the bottle. This leads to drastic consequences and James has to run away, leaving his precious daughter, Rose Mary behind.

It took Catherine a decade to recover from the mental breakdown she suffered following her miscarriages. The second half of the book explores the experience of Bridget's daughter Rosie and how her mixed racial heritage impacts upon her life. There's also a bit of an antoginist in the form of her uncle, who wasn't killed by her father, but horribly disfigured. He causes trouble for her but in the end is beaten. However the scenes at the end of the book are so vague and POV that there isn't any satisfaction in seeing him finally dealt with. She began writing to help comes to terms with her illness and turned out scores of novels. Her first effort, Kate Hannigan, was published when she was 44 - and she would write nearly 80 more books which have been translated into 17 languages with worldwide sales totalling more than 100 million. The period is described in vivid detail. I found this book educational and it helped me picture the Tyneside at that time. The dialogue feels authentic.

The mother is then left to be sort of romanced by her adopted brother - but this isn't expanded on in any form and they neither get married nor live together. I was glad of some romance in the story but did not find it particularly convincing. Rose Angela, out of the blue, was suddenly in love with her employer and they seem to have ended up together by the end. Their relationship felt under developed and I wish it was begun earlier in the story. She is also pursued by an Arab named Hassan. I liked him but he seemed to grow obsessed by her, to the point that he attempted to kill his love rival. Heading to the south coast, she worked in the laundry of a workhouse, before spending the next 46 years of her life in Hastings.The McQueens were as blunt as they were big-hearted until Bridget McQueen came home one day with her new husband. She had married a negro sailor and bore him a daughter, Rose-Angela. This child grows into a beautiful young girl, but can never escape the feeling of suspicion and hatred that are the heritage of her mixed blood. Her father, a man of fine character who desires only to live decently and at peace with his fellow men, is driven away from his wife and child by the insane jealousy of Bridget’s brother Matt. The McQueens were nothing like I was expecting. They were a horrible family. I liked Cavan and their adopted son Tony, but Kathie was detestable and Matt was evil incarnate. He was an interesting villain, and believably scary. However, I wish there was more explanation into his obsession with Bridget. I thought Bridget was a complex character and enjoyed reading about her. However I was hoping for a real love story between her and James. Catherine Cookson was an English author. Before her death in 1998, she was the United Kingdom’s most widely read novelist, boasting sales in the hundreds of millions. Despite her fame and fortune, she maintained a relatively low profile, even in the world of celebrity writers.

Before her death, Catherine Cookson had written nearly a hundred books, which have been translated in more than a dozen languages. She also wrote novels under pseudonyms like Catherine Marchant and Katie McMullen. He was interested in all aspects of production, as a fine jazz musician – he played keyboards and bass guitar, and Jelly Roll Morton on a national tour of a dramatic biography, Jelly Roll Soul, in the 1980s – and a technical geek, too, as he proved later in LA.

Publication Order of The Hamilton Trilogy Books

A compelling read and good exploration of implied and overt racial prejudice; the difficulties of an inter-racial relationship;its impact on the McQueen Family and how the child of this inter-racial marriage raised in this environment survived and found her own peace and love within this existence. Description: Vanessa Ratcliffe was just sixteen - and even though she had a convent education she had a provocative manner that drew envious eyes in her direction. She lived in one of the big houses on Brampton Hill, for the Ratcliffes, a powerful and avaricious family, were considered 'big' folk in the town. Born in Birmingham, he was the second youngest of six children of Amos Armatrading, a carpenter, who had emigrated in the 50s from St Kitts with his wife, Beryl (nee Benjamin), from Antigua, a cousin of the Lib Dem peer and entertainer Floella Benjamin, first going to Cornwall, before settling in Birmingham.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment