| | |  | Amazon Kindle | Home » » » Family Tree | | | | | | | Description: | | For as long as she can remember, Dana Clarke has longed for the stability of home and family. Now she has married a man she adores, whose heritage can be traced back to the Mayflower, and she is about to give birth to their first child. But what should be the happiest day of her life becomes the day her world falls apart. Her daughter is born beautiful and healthy, and in addition, unmistakably African-American in appearance. Dana’s determination to discover the truth about her baby’s heritage becomes a shocking, poignant journey. A superbly crafted novel, Family Tree asks penetrating questions about family and the choices people make in times of crisis.
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Average Customer Review:
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55 of 58 found the following review helpful:
Another winner by Barbara DelinskyJul 28, 2007
By Ratmammy
"The Ratmammy"
FAMILY TREE by Barbara Delinsky
July 28, 2007
Amazon Rating: 4/5 stars
I hadn't read a Barbara Delinsky book in quite a while (years) so this one was a treat. In FAMILY TREE, Dana Clarke is pregnant. She and her husband Hugh are expecting their first child with much anticipation. She is looking forward to raising her own family and creating a loving home, something she didn't have when she was growing up.
When she finally gives birth to her daughter, there is a big shock. While Dana and Hugh are both obviously white, their newborn daughter is not. She's definitely of African American descent, and now Dana is wondering who in her family was black. Hugh is able to trace his ancestry several centuries back, but there are a number of unknowns in Dana's background, including a father she knows nothing about. The birth of her daughter has now forced Dana to go in search of her roots, because it seems that Hugh isn't even sure he can trust Dana, accusing her of having an affair, possibly with their neighbor.
FAMILY TREE is about racism, and whether color has anything to do with what a person is really all about. Hugh loves his wife, but Dana feels that because he thinks she's part black, he is treating her differently. Her in-laws also find more reason to fault her, as they didn't quite welcome her with open arms to begin with. I enjoyed the book a lot, as I found the search for Dana's roots interesting. There was a lot of tension between Dana and Hugh as they try to find out where the missing link in the family tree is coming from. There is a big surprise towards the end of the story, however, and while I suspected it at first, it still came as a shock to me when it was revealed. FAMILY TREE was a fast read and fans of Barbara Delinsky and women's fiction will be sure to enjoy this one.
57 of 65 found the following review helpful:
When White is BlackAug 01, 2007
By Dera R Williams In this enlightened year of 2007, intelligent, educated people accept people for who they are, right? So what if you happen to be mixed race. Well, as long as it isn't in a blue blood family. Barbara Delinsky puts a new twist on the term "reaching back". That term refers to how a baby can reach back and take on the physical traits of an ancestor. This is what happens when Dana and Hugh, a white couple, have a baby girl who comes out with obvious African features. Hugh comes from a Brahmin New England family. His father, a professor, proudly writes about his forebears aristocratic bearing.
The premise was good,however, I found the execution to be flawed on so many levels. The condescending manner of most of the white characters and the self-deprecating manner of the token Black characters were very irritating. Another thing, all the "Black" or African American characters were bi-racial. I kept scratching my head. It's like Delinsky didn't know that Blacks could be mixed without being biracial.
David, the neighbor, left a bad taste in my mouth. He was a self-deprecating, self-hating person. He wished his half-white daughter was all white. "Life would be easier for her," he wishes he were white and, he is in love with Dana, the protagonist, and basically lives white. We find out later he is indeed biracial but his description does not lend itself to that. He was a pitiful character, whining about being black and mooning over Dana. The characters were obviously drawn from a white writer who has limited experience with blacks and therefore the integrity of the storyline was compromised. She could have asked somebody.
As a genealogist and researcher of African American culture, I am well aware of the dynamics of mixed blood and how it is played out in America. I know there are some white families who have black ancestors; a secret that some of them do not want brought to the light. As an African American, I know that we are not a monolith and we do not all subscribe to the theory that to be white is the ultimatum desire.
The story was predictable; there was a foreshadowing that predicated the end result. The best part was determining who was the "culprit"; the carrier of the dreaded African gene. I do not know where Delinsky was going with this or what, if any point she was trying to make but I expected more substance. There were too many stereotypical, clichéd characters, therefore leaving those readers who have little experience or contact with African Americans with misconceptions. The ending was a little too kumbaya but it was a quick read that some may find entertaining.
P.S. Earlier this year, I read and reviewed When She Was White by Judith Stone, a nonfiction account of a black child born to white parents in Apartheid South Africa.
Dera Williams
43 of 51 found the following review helpful:
I expected moreFeb 27, 2007
By Patricia Kay
"author and avid reader"
I'm a huge Barbara Delinsky fan, but FAMILY TREE simply didn't live up to my expectations. As another reviewer said, I couldn't identify with these characters. The premise was fantastic -- in fact, my first thought upon reading about the book was, I wish I'd thought of it first. :) I especially had problems with Hugh. From the moment he insisted upon DNA testing, I disliked him, and nothing he did after that redeemed him in my eyes. Dana, too, gave me problems. Why she acted the way she did about finding her father mystified me. And the way she behaved AFTER she found him made me dislike her, too. In fact, no one in this book behaves in a reasonable or sensible way. And no one is very likable.
The prose is pure Delinsky -- clean and spare -- always great. But it's really frustrating when I plunk down cash for a hard cover novel by an author I expect to really enjoy and then the story and characters disappoint big time.
However, I'll still keep buying Delinsky in hopes that FAMILY TREE is simply an exception to her usual skillful and enjoyable stories.
45 of 54 found the following review helpful:
Really, really badMar 04, 2007
By Holly Kincaid
"Book addict"
I normally love Barbara Delinsky books (read my review on "Summer I Dared), but this was an exception. Ms. Delinsky comes across as wanting to write a "serious" book about "serious" issues and the whole thing fails miserably. It feels very, very forced. The characters are contrived and they behave in ways that make absolutely no sense. Some of the characters change positions without any warning or explanation. All of the characters act like small children wanting their way and oblivious of those around them and how they feel. This would make sense for some characters, but NONE of them act like the mature/successful/intelligent people Ms. Delinsky describes them to be. It feels like the characters do and say things to make a point Ms. Delinsky wants to make rather than that being how the character would think or behave. I found myself thinking "you have got to be kidding" more times than I can say as I read this book.
I can't go into plot line without having "spoilers" which will prevent this from being posted, but just let me say ..... if you want to read it, go to the library. Please don't spend your hard-earned money on this !
18 of 20 found the following review helpful:
Frustrating, contrived...not one for reading enjoyment..Feb 20, 2007
By Barbara McArthur
"writer/editor"
I guess I identify with characters who react to situations as I would. I feel frustrated by characters who know that digging out answers will solve their problem, but, for some reason, don't feel ready to do the digging..so postpone and mess around until you want to scream, "For heaven's sakes, just do it!" I also feel frustrated by side stories that distract, and really don't add to the main action. And, the knitting dialogue, which goes into needless detail...puleeze.... I love the warmth of a knitting shop as much as the next person, but, unless a particular yarn or pattern figures into the story, don't bog me down with it! The premise of this book is intriguing, and calls upon us all to think about how we would react to a similar situation - but when our main characters drag their feet and parse the problem to an excrutiating extreme, one wants to yell, "Enough!" Deal with it, get on with it. Life's too short. By the way, I'm a Delinsky fan...but this one left me cold.
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