Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Beautiful Dreamers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From Minrose Gwin, award-winning author of The Accidentals, comes Beautiful Dreamers, a story of a precocious teen and her mother, their gay best friend, and the con man who unravels their family.

It's 1953 when Memory Feather and her mother, Virginia, are welcomed back home to the Mississippi Gulf Coast community of Belle Cote by Virginia's childhood friend Mac McFadden, whose verve and energy buoy the recently divorced Virginia to embrace this new chapter. Memory ("Mem") is unlike other girls: she is attuned to the voices of plants and animals and is missing two fingers on her twisted left hand. The three of them knit their lives together and become a close, though unconventional, family.

While Mac's wealth, brains, and good humor have allowed him to carve out a niche in Belle Cote, his position as a gay man active in the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement exposes him to censure, harassment, and even brutality. When the unscrupulous and charismatic Tony Amato arrives in Belle Cote as Mac's "guest," he sets in motion a series of events that will shatter familial bonds and forever change Mem's life. Now, an adult Mem recounts the story of the scars Tony left in her teenage years, confronting her culpability in the disastrous events of that final summer.

Sweeping, dramatic, and vividly rendered, Beautiful Dreamers novel of innocence and betrayal, love and intolerance, and the care and honesty we owe the families we choose.

  • Creators

  • Series

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2024
      After Memory Feather's father leaves, she and her mother, Virginia, move to the El Camino motel, where her mother works as a housekeeper. When an old family friend spots Virginia scrubbing a toilet, Memory's grandparents insist they come back to the town of Belle Cote, nestled on the salty waters of the Mississippi Sound.The area teems with wildlife that fourth-grader Memory can privately understand. Post-WWII Belle Cote is a Southern town steeped in tradition and rife with discrimination. When her parents' narrow-mindedness gets to be too much for Virginia, she and Memory move in with her bighearted, mercurial, gay childhood friend Mac. Steeped in foreboding and simmering with tension, the fragile idyll of their threesome is dangerously disrupted by the arrival of Mac's lover Tony, whose flirtations mask a dangerous, perhaps deadly, egotism. As the years pass, violence and betrayal stalk their close-knit group. With luscious prose, sharply drawn characters, and a dash of magical realism, Gwin's (The Accidentals, 2019) atmospheric novel confronts both prejudice and the price we pay for protecting our loved ones.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      A young girl's coming-of-age in a small Southern town takes unusual twists in this historical novel. After young Memory Feather's father runs off with a "French hussy" and leaves her and her mother, Virginia, nearly destitute in New Mexico, they reluctantly move to Virginia's hometown of Belle Cote, Mississippi. Virginia detests the town's bigotry and insular attitudes, and she dreads being dependent on her loving but judgmental parents, but it's 1953 and single mothers have few good options. Memory, who narrates the novel retrospectively, was born with a withered hand with only three fingers, and she fears being shunned for it. But Belle Cote has one big attraction: Virginia's lifelong best friend, Mac. Today, Memory tells us, "we would simply call Mac McFadden gay, one of the countless gay men who flourish in small southern communities." In 1953, Mac is tolerated--as long as he doesn't go too far. His boundless charm and the popular art and antique shop he runs help offset the clucks over the raucous parties he hosts in his big, lovely house. Virginia and Memory happily move in with him and, for a while, things are good. Memory is taken by a portrait in Mac's house, a painting of an arrestingly handsome man he calls his "beautiful dreamer." Then the man seems to step out of the frame and show up at the front door. Attacks on gay people as well as violence against civil rights activists haunt the story, but the biggest threat to the trio of Memory, Virginia, and Mac is the beautiful Tony Amato. Mac is thrilled by his return. Memory knows Mac has what the town derisively calls "house boys," but she is fuzzy on what that means. She's even more puzzled when her mother and Tony begin to flirt. Memory tells us she's always had the ability to understand the speech of animals, and Mac's huge black cat, Minerva, keeps telling her, "Things are going to get much worse." Minerva is right. Belle Cote and its Gulf of Mexico locale are richly evoked, as is New Orleans, and the author handles suspense deftly. Memory's witty voice moves convincingly between a child's innocence and a teenager's dawning awareness--sometimes exhilarating, sometimes terrifying--of adulthood. An engaging narrator draws the reader through this compelling story of love, betrayal, and identity.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading