Bonnie Tharp Books
Hoffman brings the St. Thomas island community to life. Our main characters are Jews who have escaped to St. Thomas from Spain and Portugal in the 1800s. Rachel and her best friend, Jestine whose mother is the African cook for the Pomie family, roam the island at will.
As Rachel grows she becomes more aware of the divisions between the groups in town. The Jewish community is very tight-knit. A headstrong girl who wants to escape the island to Paris, Rachel dreams of walking along the Seine, while most girls her age want to have families.
When her father's retail store gets into financial trouble due to weather, lost ships, and cargo, Rachel is asked to marry an older man (Mr. Petit) whose business meshes with the Pomies. She wants to marry for love but understands the family needs her union to survive. Their cook tells Rachel that she will know love one day and will have many children and be married more than once.
She becomes a stepmother to three children and has three more with her husband (20 years older). She admires her husband and loves the children, but when he dies suddenly his cousin from Paris is sent to take over the business.
As independent and strong-willed as Rachel is, she is prepared to not like him and offers to continue managing the business as she has done with Mr. Enrique (a freed slave) since Mr. Petit's death. Sparks fly when he arrives and their lives are turned upside down. For the first time, Rachel knows love and it is forbidden.
The story follows Rachel's life and the lives of her nine children. The youngest is the most like Rachel in temperament, so they clash at every turn. Her youngest becomes an artist and can't wait to escape St. Thomas for a life in Paris.
I don't want to spoil it for you so I won't say any more, except it is a very lovely, troubled story that delves into secret places, dark sides, and community prejudices.