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Baby Brother's Blues

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When Regina Burns married Blue Hamilton, she knew he was no ordinary man. Regina enjoyed a circle of engaging friends and her own work as communications consultant, but she especially relished the company of her husband, who never ceased to be a source of passion and delight. Then everything changes. Frightened women are showing up in West End, seeking Blue's protection from lovers who have suddenly become violent. When the worst offenders begin to disappear, the speculation seems to implicate Blue and his long-time associates. Now that Regina is pregnant, her fears for Blue's safety have become an obsession that threatens the heart of their relationship. Returning to the Atlanta neighborhoods of her last two novels, Pearl Cleage has crafted a warm, witty novel that illuminates the core of every woman's hopes and dreams.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Blue Hamilton and "General" Richardson keep the peace in West End Atlanta--Mafia style. Blue and his wife, Regina, are expecting their first child, so she's concerned about his safety. Meanwhile, "General" thinks he's found his true love reincarnated as a stripper. Cleage has populated her novel with strong minor characters who upstage Blue and the General. "Baby Brother" is Regina's ambitionless brother, who is home from Iraq on a five-day pass for his mother's funeral and who has no intention of returning and every intention of sponging off everyone he meets. Cleage's voice is pleasant and her narration smooth, but she spends forever on minor character development, causing the story to stall. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 30, 2006
      At the start of this scorching morality tale from Cleage (Babylon Sisters), Wesley "Baby Brother" Jamerson, a soldier reluctantly serving in Iraq, is on a five-day emergency leave in Washington, D.C., because his mother has died. But Wes, who "had made an art form of avoiding responsibility," has no plans to attend his mother's funeral. Nor does he intend to return to his unit in Iraq. A failed attempt to visit his older sister, Cassie, to whom he's shown little gratitude despite all her efforts to help him, leads to a lecture from his judge brother-in-law: "You youngbloods think the world owes you a living, and for what? You're mad at your mamas, mad at your daddies, mad at the women foolish enough to have your children. Always crying the blues." It's downhill for the self-destructive Wes from there. Cleage manages to end on a note of uplift, but an overly complex plot and a surfeit of underdeveloped supporting characters diminish the impact of this novel of infidelity and greed.

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  • English

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