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Indigo Rose by Susan Miller — book cover

Indigo Rose

by Susan Miller
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Overview

From author Susan Beth Miller comes a luminous debut novel in the tradition of Jamaica Kincaid. Emotionally gripping and exquisitely written, Indigo Rose tells the story of one woman’s extraordinary passage from sorrow to joy–and the uncommon journey that restores her spirit.

When Indigo Rosemartin leaves behind her beloved only child, Louisa, and her homeland of Jamaica to earn a better wage in America, she has no idea just how final her good-bye will be. In Chicago she keeps house for Professor Silver, whose three daughters come to depend on her in the wake of their parents’ crumbling marriage. But when Indigo receives devastating news that is every mother’s worst nightmare, she finds herself without purpose in a wintry, unfamiliar world–her heart hardened even against the girls she has cared for second only to her own.

Stricken, Indigo drifts through her days until she discovers Brother Man’s, a private gambling club run by a charismatic fellow Jamaican. In this smoky, lively place that recalls her island home, Indigo numbs her pain at the roulette table in the company of other lost souls. But as her hunger for diversion threatens to consume her life, she realizes that only by facing down her despair will she ever again feel love.

With mesmerizing prose, an unforgettable heroine, and a vibrantly drawn cast of characters, this powerful tale offers a compelling window into the ways we make peace with the past–and how family, community, and love can open our hearts to the future.

About the Author, Susan Miller

Susan Miller is a psychologist and the author of several nonfiction books on psychology. Her short fiction has won numerous awards, including two Avery Hopwood Prizes. She lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Biography

Susan Miller and her husband Bob enjoy sharing stories of rural life and collecting farming mementos. After some sixty-four combined years in the printing business, the Millers are focusing on writing and collecting. They reside in Crawfordsville, Indiana.

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Editorials

Kirkus Reviews

Personal tragedy puts a Jamaican child-care provider on the road to ruin-in a contrived, sometimes overwrought, and jazzily accented debut. Indigo Rosemartin's young daughter Louisa is killed by a hit-and-run driver back in Kingston, while Indigo is in the States trying to earn money to send home. Indigo's grief, compounded by her guilt at having left the fatherless girl home while she works for a professor's family in suburban Chicago, hardens her heart against the three American girls of various ages she tends house for daily-as well as against the friends who care about and live around her, and the male admirers she refuses to give the time of day. The girls, Clair, Jill, and Julie Silver, are growing up without their own mother, a kind of dopey, unstable hypochondriac who calls regularly to threaten custody proceedings and terrorize her daughters. Professor Silver, a 50ish bookworm who studies generations of refugees, especially Jews who suffered in death camps, rarely looks up from his all-consuming work to gauge the goings-on in the household. Gradually, Indigo begins to frequent a gambling house run by the infamous charmer Brother Man, a ruthless criminal and thug who enjoys getting rough with the ladies who fall in his debt-and Indigo has lost her head to roulette. Miller's Jamaican characters ring proud and true and speak in a sing-song patois that seems almost too musically delightful to possess the pain of suffering from homesickness, poverty, or spiritual impoverishment. Indigo has to make her way "back to caring"-for friends, for the sweet girls in her care, who depend on her, and for an acceptable life for herself. While her journey is affecting, it's also ratherunsurprising and platitudinous: the author isn't prepared to get rough enough herself to create a viscerally convincing tale. Still, despite occasional clunkiness, Miller's vernacular style is altogether winning in a story that seriously tries to examine the depression of foreign caregivers. Agent: Alison Picard

Book Details

Published
December 18, 2007
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
304
ISBN
9780307418135

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