
Family Tree
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Narrated by:
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Karen White
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By:
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Barbara Delinsky
“Family Tree is warm, rich, textured, and impossible to put down.” (Nora Roberts)
Dana Clarke has always longed for the stability of home and family - her own childhood was not an easy one. Now she has married a man she adores and is about to give birth to their first child. But though her daughter is born beautiful and healthy, no one can help noticing the African American traits in her appearance. Dana’s husband, to her great shock and dismay, begins to worry that people will think Dana has had an affair.
The only way to repair the damage done is for Dana to track down the father she never knew. Dana’s determination to discover the truth becomes a poignant journey back through her past that unearths secrets rooted in prejudice and fear.
Barbara Delinsky’s Family Tree is an utterly unforgettable novel that asks penetrating questions about race, family, and the choices people make in times of crisis - choices having profound consequences that can last for generations.
©2007 Barbara Delinsky (P)2007 Books on TapeListeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
"Delinsky gets the political and personal dynamics right." (Publishers Weekly)
"Delinsky delves deeper into the human heart and spirit with each new novel." (Cincinnati Enquirer)
“The old and illustrious New England Clarke family has a new member and she is not what the family envisioned. Elizabeth Clarke, a beautiful daughter born to Hugh and Dana, possesses definite African-American traits, leaving the parents puzzled and the extended Clarke family scandalized. Now, on what should be a joyous occasion, the birth of their first child, Hugh and Dana are struggling with issues of race, family, and trust. Delinsky often writes with insight about complex family matters, and here adds thought-provoking concerns about race in America to the mix in a novel that will stir debate and inspire self-examination.” (Booklist)
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Eye Opening for whites but not for non-whites.
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Wonderful
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How did the narrator detract from the book?
The narrator was awful. Accents were way off. Characters who were from New England were given country bumpkin accents. Child voices were overplayed. Usually a poor narrator can be ignored after getting into the story. Not this one. It was all I could do to keep listening.Any additional comments?
The book is one that will generate discussion about race and identity at book groups and for that it serves its purpose.Not great literature but will generate discussion
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I AM NOT
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Great story evolves
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very disappointing
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OK but not great
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One World Story
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Good twist
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Then on second thought it fit exactly what people who all of a sudden discovers a mixed heritage that they didn’t know about. Especially one where the woman (mother) had an affair that resulted in a child that was pinned on a unsuspecting husband. The question becomes was the husband in the dark or hide the affair once child was born looking white.
The fact that each of these characters had an issue with suspected African roots calling themselves African American was a bit insulting. One was privileged and looked nothing of his heritage. The other was blond and blue eyed with little connection to the disadvantages blacks face daily. Interesting story that shows what happens when colorism arise from past family deeds. We are not a color blind society.
Color blind society?
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