Silver Sparrow
by Tayari Jones
Hardcover- N/A

With the opening line of Silver Sparrow, “My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist,” author Tayari Jones unveils a breathtaking ...

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  "2 Very Different Points of View" by cdounn (see profile) 08/01/11

Takes an interesting premise and then tells it from 2 different points of view. It gives a lot to talk about.

 
  "Slver Sparrow" by 12646rozum (see profile) 09/29/11

Didn't learn anything from the book. The ending was unsatisfying. Felt the book was pretty pointless.

 
  "A Thought-Provoking Book About A Situation That is Probably More Common Than We'd Think" by Pam Jones (see profile) 09/30/11

We all know that many married men have affairs. Is it so crazy to think those affairs might result in children? Is it possible that the fathers might feel drawn to take care of his new family, as a second secret family, while also feeling an obligation to stay with and maintain his first family?

This is the premise for Silver Sparrow. Throughout the book, you continually ask yourself, what else could they have done? The answers to that question - and the inevitable discussion - makes for a great book club book.

 
  "Silver Sparrow" by cwiechart (see profile) 03/13/12

Most in our club felt if they had read the author's note which explains her history and purpose of the story they may have felt more compelled to read on. No one hated the book but no one loves it either. Last line in the book was rather disturbing....left you with an empty feeling for the characters

 
  "Real people" by Imshelliee (see profile) 06/29/12

This book was about fictional people who were flawed as we all are. Two families are intertwined by the patriarch who they both share and together (and separately) they have to make their way through life.

 
  "Complicated situation story" by mystryrdr (see profile) 09/25/12

This book is a little bit like watching a car wreck in action. You can't take your "eyes" off the situation even though you can see that nothing good is going to come of it. With the narrator changing halfway through, the author efficiently shifts your loyalties a bit as you sympathize with both of these daughters and what they want and the reality neither of them chose.

 
  "" by jwarfield (see profile) 05/27/14

 
  "" by happenin heather (see profile) 09/19/14

NOTE: While I don't think this review has any major spoilers, it does have more revelations than I normally include.

This story begins through the eyes of Dana Lynn, a young girl of color being raised in relatively poor circumstances. She and her mother don't live in poverty, but they are surviving on a single mother's nursing salary. As the first line in the book states quite bluntly, Dana's father is a bigamist, already married to another woman and yet married to her mother as well.

The book reveals Dana's life with her mother Gwen, and what she knows of the life of her father's other family with his wife Laverne and other daughter Chaurisse. It was fascinating to see the story through Dana’s eyes, and to build your impression of Chaurisse and her mother and everything else through Dana, and then to suddenly have that shift a little over halfway through the story, and see things from Chaurisse’s perspective. I loved that about this story.

Dana's mother Gwen married young, a boy she knew from middle school. She married him after graduation, and they divorced a couple of years later. Working a store counter, she met James Witherspoon one day while he was looking for a gift for his wife. Within a year after her divorce, she was living in a rooming house and pregnant with a married man's child.

So Gwen has her baby and puts herself through school to become a nurse. Shortly after Dana's birth, James and Gwen marry in a neighboring state. Dana is raised knowing from a young age about her father's other family, and getting the sense that she must spend her life playing second fiddle to sister Chaurisse.

However sister Chaurisse and the family know nothing of Dana and her mother. It isn't until grandmother Bunny is on her deathbed that her grandmother is finally told of Dana, and Dana is brought to meet her.

Bunny was my favorite character, as brief as she was in the story. She wished her boys would have told her sooner of Dana's existence, and that she'd had time to get to know her.

I read this one for my book club, and the consensus was that the characters weren't very likable. In fact, one woman in the group really disliked this book! It's one of those books that can just leave a bad taste in your mouth, because you are so frustrated with the characters and the way they handle the events in their lives.

And father James, while you give him credit for trying to be a part of his "illegitimate" daughter's life, you see the unfairness of it all. Dana is always given second best. She gets her father one day a week while here sister gets him every day. Throughout her life she has to sacrifice her wants for that of her sister (when her sister wants a summer job at the same place as Dana or wants to attend the same program, it is Dana that must forfeit her desire). And while her father and his wife Laverne make a good living and are able to provide their daughter Chaurisse with a comfortable life that include debutante balls, Dana lives in the projects, being raised on her mother's salary and whatever scraps her father tosses their way.

James' brother Raleigh is sort of likable, but his general inaction and silence in the face of what his brother is doing to Dana and her mother is infuriating at times. He is his brother's accomplice in his duplicity, and James could not have pulled off the dual lives (one public and one secret) without Raleigh, who is even named as Dana's father on her birth certificate.

Aside from the story content or writing style, I was surprised at the poor formatting of the ebook. There were a lot of typos and I could swear there were missing passages. There were strange stilted endings to chapters. Others in my book club agreed that some of the chapters ended rather abruptly.


My final word: This book was "okay". I enjoyed the unique dual perspective, I was intrigued by the concept. But when it came down to it, I just didn't like the characters very much. Bunny was the only one I really cared for, and the daughter Chaurisse and uncle Raleigh I liked a bit. The writing style was okay, but not thoroughly engaging. It gets an "eh" from me. Kind of intriguing, but the characters are ultimately unlikable.

 
  "Silver Sparrow" by Carolynr (see profile) 02/01/16

i rated this as not for a book club but others might disagree. story is told from the perspective of both girls. I found the characters wimpy and wanted the second wife to stand up for herself more. But others might find the concepts interesting to discuss precisely because of that. I wanted a bit more from the ending. so not my favorite.

 
  "" by cpowers (see profile) 12/20/16

Looking for a topic you don't read about in fiction much? This is it. Led to conversation from each characters point of view. You just don't know until it's you.

 
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