BookPleasures.com - http://www.bookpleasures.com/websitepublisher
A Brown Paper Bag and A Fine Tooth Comb Reviewed By Sandra Shwayder Sanchez of Bookpleasures.com
http://www.bookpleasures.com/websitepublisher/articles/5964/1/A-Brown-Paper-Bag-and-A-Fine-Tooth-Comb-Reviewed-By-Sandra-Shwayder-Sanchez-of-Bookpleasurescom/Page1.html
Sandra Shwayder Sanchez

Reviewer Sandra Shwayder Sanchez: Sandra is a retired attorney and co-founder of a small non-profit publishing collective: The Wessex Collective with whom she has published two short fiction collections (A Mile in These Shoes and Three Novellas) and one novel, Stillbird.

Her most recent novel, The Secret of A Long Journey is soon to be released by Floricanto Press in April 2012 and her first novel, The Nun, originally published by Plain View Press in 1992 is being  reissued in a 2nd Edition with additional material by PVP in March 2012.


 
By Sandra Shwayder Sanchez
Published on April 26, 2013
 

Author Claudette Carrida Jeffrey

Publisher: Infinity Publishing

ISBN:  978-0-7414-7903-7





Author Claudette Carrida Jeffrey

Publisher: Infinity Publishing

ISBN:  978-0-7414-7903-7


Families are complicated, so can be friendships. Ask anyone: everyone has their stories. In A Brown Paper Bag and a Fine Tooth Comb, author Claudette Carrida Jeffrey has created authentically idiosyncratic characters navigating universal plots and subplots and it is this combination of the universal and the idiosyncratic that puts this novel in the highest echelon of classic literary fiction. 

Black or white, male or female, straight or gay,  old or young, religious or agnostic, readers who care for others and truly believe in the social values of equality and inclusion are going to applaud this excellent, moving novel. The narrator, Claire Soublet, is an extremely smart, thoughtful girl  who was taught to read at the age of three by a now dead aunt and has ambitions to get a college education and see the world. 

She is moved to anger by people who discriminate on the basis of race or gender. She is moved to compassion by people who are victims of discrimination or ignored when they need and deserve to be acknowledged and assisted. She is also moved to anger when she fears she is about to be abandoned and/or betrayed in some way.

She’s had a history that predisposes her to this defensiveness. And she begins to suspect the mysterious life histories of other people she meets, most importantly an old white woman who takes her in after her grandmother dies.

The undeclared but deeply felt love that grows between Claire and the mysterious Sera is the focal point of the novel. Revolving around this important relationship over the years as Claire grows into, through  and out of adolescence, we meet several young men who are enamored of her for various reasons, some good, some not so good.  It is through her eyes that we see what women of that time were up against, what people of color in that region were up against, the kinds of prejudices that restricted their dreams, their aspirations, their relationships.

 The best books take the reader to the time and place, when and where the story is set. (Think Wuthering Heights, Yorkshire Moors in an earlier century). Brown Paper Bag definitely takes readers to the world of New Orleans in the forties and fifties. Readers who have been to New Orleans will recognize it. Readers who have never been there will feel like they have.

 This book does more than tell a story, it gives the gift of experience. It leaves us hopeful for Claire’s future and eager for a sequel that will divulge the details of  that future as well as Sera’s intriguing past.  Highly recommended!

 
Follow Here To Purchase A Brown Paper Bag and A Fine Tooth Comb

Check Out Some Great Deals on Amazon.com