Summertime

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What to expect

Florida, 1935, and the residents of Heron Key are preparing for the 4th July barbecue, little realising how much their world is about to change.

Domestic helps Missy and Selma are dismembering the alligator that tried to snatch the baby Missy was watching, before they can get ready for the party. Henry, a returned soldier from WW1, is hoping that his comrades in his construction team will not disgrace themselves in front of an already fiercely judgemental community. Hilda Kincaid, is squeezing into a frock, wondering how she will face another night of public humiliation as her husband toys with Doreen from the golf club. And Sheriff Dwayne Campbell - laughing stock since his wife gave birth to their mixed-race son - is squaring up to deal with any troublemakers and prove he can control the town, even if he can't control his wife...

Tensions simmer at the party and in the early hours of the morning, a woman is found half-beaten to death. As whites turn on blacks, the finger of suspicion points at one man. And while wild accusations are made, far over the Atlantic a tropical storm changes direction and turns towards Florida, increasing in speed by the second. As the hurricane beacons are lit along the Keys, the town folk prepare themselves as they always do, unaware that the approaching storm is beyond anything they have ever experienced. In one night, Heron Key will change forever.

Read by Adjoa Andoh

(p) 2015 Orion Publishing Group

Critics Review

  • A storming debut novel [that] captures the racial and social tensions in southern America after the First World War. Part social history and part love story, this features the hurricane as a forceful, malevolent character in its own right, whipping through the pages.

    THE BOOKSELLER
  • ‘Powerful, beautifully written and simply unputdownable. If you can read this book and not be moved, you have a heart of stone.’

    Cathy Kelly
  • ‘I absolutely loved SUMMERTIME; it’s rare to read something with such emotional intensity and such exciting pace. It is every bit as good as THE HELP, in my opinion.’

    Elizabeth Noble
  • 1935. An Independence day BBQ simmers with racial tension and resentments. By morning, a terrible crime has been committed. Off the Florida coast, a hurricane is heading their way. So tense, I raced through it.

    WOMAN & HOME
  • part love-story, part eye-opening insight into a tumultuous time in American history – the years after the First World War, when veterans tried to rebuild their lives and racial tensions ran high

    GOOD HOUSEKEEPING
  • A small community is rocked by an attack on a white woman and suspicion falls on war veteran Henry in a story set against the backdrop of a catastrophic hurricane. Vanessa Lafaye’s Summertime is being compared to The Help and To Kill A Mockingbird.

    SUNDAY EXPRESS

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