
A Woman Called Fancy
Frank Yerby, Hadasah Shapira1951
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About
***Men offered everything they possessed to possess her*** -- but there was only one man she wanted. From him she asked only love. ***A Woman Called Fancy, published in 1951, is Frank Yerby's first novel with a female protagonist. Set in Augusta, Georgia, the novel covers the period from 1880 to 1894*** and traces the rise of the heroine, a beautiful South Carolina woman, from poverty to prominence among Augusta's artistocrats. **Fancy fled an incestuous marriage arranged by a drunken father.** She had little education and no money. But with the priceless gifts of courage, honor and high personal integrity, Fancy won out against all odds and wrenched from life a position of respect and security.... a life that was secure against everyone except her husband. **Court Brantley, had already killed one man for her and Fancy knew that if he ever found out about Jed Hawkins he would do so again.** ***Warning:*** Many derogatory, ethnic slangs and other 'swear' words, used throughout this book. The taboo ''N'' word used to extreme, in line with the angry (now unacceptable), Post-Civil War language spoken, during that period, of more than one 'non-lily-white' race. HOWEVER, please read the entire historical novel, keeping in mind that the author/historian of this book was 1/2 African-American, 1/2 caucasian. ***_this opinion is not necessarily that of Open Library, but it is the opinion of this volunteer reviewer/editor - EDP.*** **LibraryThing Review: ***Madamxtra (3 of 5 Stars/Apr 21, 2015) Honestly, I read this book for shear diversity, something outside my usual scope***. I'm impressed; though I wasn't at first. **The repeated used of the "N" word, the whinny women and barbaric men was getting to me, though the story was thoroughly interesting.** Frank, the author surprised me be by delving into minds, heart-ships and lifestyles of 19th Century aristocrats, **would-be abolitionists and down-trodden African (Negro) Americans**. **Franks depictions of Geor
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Details
Pages
326
ISBN
9780434890286
Published
1951
Spice Level
Not rated