Saturday, 26 June 2021

The Pirate's Daughter - thirty years of hurt!

The letter C was next to be drawn out of the hat, and it led me to The Pirate's Daughter by Margaret Cezar-Thomson, a book I picked up in a charity shop many years ago but never quite got around to reading ... until now! Set in Jamaica, the story opens in 1946 when Errol Flynn washes up on the island in his yacht, Zaca. This is, of course, big news, and Ida Joseph, a local teenager, is determined to meet the "world's most handsomest man". Meanwhile, Flynn falls in love with the tropical paradise and sets up home on Navy Island, where he entertains his Hollywood friends and rekindles some of the spark that has been lacking of late. Despite the age gap, Flynn takes a shine to Ida and pays her special attention. She is convinced that they will soon marry, but Flynn's interest wanes and he moves on to other women (no big surprise there), and barely acknowledges that he has left a teenager pregnant and facing hardship. Ida fights to bring up her daughter, May, the best way she can, even leaving her on the island for years while she moves to America for work. When Flynn returns to the island, May meets him just the once and it is a strangely sad encounter. By a strange quirk of fate, Ida finally comes home as the wife of one of Flynn's closest friends. She is reunited with her daughter, and they take up residence in Flynn's old house on Navy Island. Despite the relationship often being fraught, life goes on as they try to live with the spectre of Flynn constantly haunting them. All of this is set against the backdrop of a Jamaica struggling for, and then living with the early years of independence. Whilst there was much about this book that I enjoyed, I couldn't help but feel a little squeamish about the relationship with Flynn. The two central women, Ida and her daughter May, weren't always easy to like (but then, who of us is) and I wanted to shout at them a few times for repeating mistakes or getting things so wrong in the first place. There were also many, many characters and I sometimes got confused as to who was who, but that could just be me! What was most pleasing was that the writing totally transported me to another place, one I am not familiar with. Overall, an interesting read, with a hint of "what if ..." about it. I can definitely see this as a great holiday read too.

My STAR rating: THREE.

Length: 528 print pages.

Price I paid: £1.50 (from a charity shop).

Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, audio CD, ebook.

No comments:

Post a Comment