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The Wedding: A Novel by Dorothy West
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The Wedding: A Novel (edition 1996)

by Dorothy West

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7751729,152 (3.71)31
In the 1950s, a girl from the black bourgeoisie in Martha's Vineyard announces her engagement to a white musician. The novel follows the impact this has on her family and the community around them. By the author of The Living Is Easy.
Member:Thesavvybamalady
Title:The Wedding: A Novel
Authors:Dorothy West
Info:Anchor (1996), Edition: 1st Anchor Books Ed, Paperback
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The Wedding by Dorothy West

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English (15)  Dutch (1)  French (1)  All languages (17)
Showing 1-5 of 15 (next | show all)
Almost entirely a genealogy, with a tiny bit of plot thrown in for justification. And that plot, by the way, was completely implausible. ( )
  blueskygreentrees | Jul 30, 2023 |
Shelby Coles is getting married to a white man - a jazz musician. The Coles family lives on Martha's Vinyard in an area known as the Oval which is the home to the upper class Black families. Shelby's sister, Liz, is married with a child to a very dark Black man and the grandmother Gran has difficulty loving the child. The amount of darkness is an on-going stress with both sides of this family. The novel goes back to tell the stories of the great grandparents who were slaves and products of the white owner and the black slave. Each generation struggles with loving or diminishing their skin color. Shelby is actually a blonde and when she gets lost as a child, the police and neighborhood are looking for a white girl.

Race is really a central theme of this book, and not just race, but skin color. Older generations wanting to be white, the younger generations embracing their color. The only character I really had a hard time understanding is Lute, a social-climbing black man with three girls from three different mothers. He wants to marry Shelby because of her family. Interesting book. ( )
  maryreinert | Jun 27, 2023 |
Dorothy West is a master of character development. Every member of the Martha's Vineyard Oval community is meticulously realized by their actions and reactions to events surrounding them and by the subservient relationships they keep: black and white, man and wife, neighbor and stranger, parent and child, landlord and tenant. Strangely enough, there is harmony in the contrasts.
It is the wedding of beautiful Shelby Coles. Her engagement to a white jazz musician from New York City has her family in turmoil. Lute McNeil would like nothing better than to steal Miss Coles for his own. He already has three young daughters by three different white women, but in his obsessive mind Shelby would make the perfect mother for his biracial children. Even though the Oval is comprised of black middle class residents, the question of belonging is pervasive. The standard assumption that blonde hair and blue eyes means white race. Everyone uses color to get what they want. Example: the preacher uses the image of white children in danger of hurting themselves around a derelict barn in order to get a white man to give him a horse that was of no use to him. The preacher is really after the barn wood.
Dorothy West forces her characters to face the question of identity. The end of The Wedding will leave you hanging. Would Shelby have given Lute a chance if tragedy had not intervened? Were Shelby's sisters right in their warnings about misguided infatuation? ( )
  SeriousGrace | Feb 5, 2023 |
An amazingly well-written exploration of weddings as a representation of what we create and destroy when we ensnare ourselves. Elegant and profound, this novel captures a glimpse of a family that may never have existed, but that nevertheless explores the boundaries of our humanity - complicated by expectations and soothed by empathy.

"With a sigh of completion, she fell asleep, and the night folded down on the still spent forms of the forgiven." ( )
  dbsovereign | Jan 28, 2023 |
Rounding up from a 4.5. It was a beautiful story but not super impactful or relatable like my 5-star reads. I listened to the audiobook and it was so well done. The writing is beautiful, the themes are interesting, the characters are complex and we get to experience them all within a brief 24 hours or so of their lives. I really enjoyed seeing this looming wedding from all perspectives. The very end may have wrapped things up a little too neatly, but I think that's forgivable because we know there's so much more this family will continue to sort out. ( )
  tanyaferrell | Dec 29, 2022 |
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Epigraph
Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. --I Corinthians 13:4-7
Dedication
To the memory of my editor, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Though there was never such a mismatched pair in appearance, we were perfect partners.
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On a morning in later August, the morning before the wedding, the sun rising out of the quiet sea stirred the Oval from its shapeless sleep and gave dimension and design to the ring of summer cottages.
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ISBN 0739436562 is for The Wedding by Nicolas Sparks.
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In the 1950s, a girl from the black bourgeoisie in Martha's Vineyard announces her engagement to a white musician. The novel follows the impact this has on her family and the community around them. By the author of The Living Is Easy.

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Book description
VIRAGO EDITION:
Set on the Elysian isle of Martha's Vineyard, among an insular community of proud and prosperous black families, Dorothy West's first novel for nearly fifty years centres aroung the marriage of Shelby Coles, daughter of the community's foremost family, to a struggling white jazz musician.
Not just the story of one wedding, but of many, this thought-provoking and deeply involving novel offers insights into issues of race, prejudice and identity while maintaining its firm belief in the compensatory power of love.
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