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Daughter of Fortune

Daughter of Fortune
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Manufacturer: Rebound by Sagebrush
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A magnificent sweeping tale from the international bestselling author of 'The House of the Spirits'. Set in Anglophile Chile and goldrush California during the middle years of the nineteenth century, this magnificent romance tells the story of English foundling Eliza Sommers who grows up in the bustling entrepot of Valparaiso. Eliza is a spirited, sparky and ambitious romantic who becomes embroiled in a forbidden love affair with the charismatic but capricious Joaquin Andieta. When he disappears suddenly for California, and the promise of riches that rumours of gold strikes have brought him, she can but follow after him!

 

What Customers Say About Daughter of Fortune:

This story takes us back to the mid-19th century, from Chile to the gold rush town of San Francisco. I have read this book twice, and recommend it to any fan of literature. I felt as if I were visiting these places while reading and as a teacher of history and a fan of a great story, I could not put the book down. When I read any work of Isabel Allende, her writing style and the way she is able to get into the mind of her characters sucks me in from start to finish. Daughter of Fortune is Allende at her best. She dives into the cultures of Chile, China, and America through her cast of characters, and I found myself wanting to know more about each. My only regret was that the book was not longer.

They are both enthralling stories told by a weaver of magic. the way this woman writes--her style, humor, and pace--she could be writing the daily stock market report, and it would be a thoroughly entertaining page-turner. I read House of Spirits and Eva Luna a couple of years ago. I'm reading the English translation, and if it's this good, one can only imagine how it is in Spanish. I read Daughter of Fortune last month, and this month I'm reading Zorro. I loved them, but I don't remember those being as playful as parts of these two more recent books are. Sometimes the tale is magical and compelling, and sometimes it's just a good old-fashioned whopper.

Tao and his history are fascinating and build him as a pleasurable whole, a Chinese immigrant doctor of sorts who finds a relationship with the white populace. The story begins with a focus on Rose, the young spinster sister of Jeremy, with whom she lives quite comfortably in Valparaiso, Chile, and John, a ship's captain at sea much of the time. Rose raised Eliza but is not her birth mother and the reports of her coming into Rose's household vary and are inconclusive, but seem to indicate that Eliza was abandoned at Rose's door as an infant. As noticed in other Allende's wonderful House of the Spirits, the women are extremely clearly drawn, and as in Zorro, the adventurous men also take on good life. You'll be happy to have traveled with them. Through an odyssey of adventures, romantic, chilling, and unusual, Eliza's life becomes entwined with Tao Ch'ien, originally from China.

Life in Valparaiso, nineteenth century China, and California during the Gold Rush provide settings for the characters to engage in lifetimes to draw the reader in eagerly. After learning Rose's history in England, her present situation and tendencies, the story becomes Eliza's. The three, Rose, Eliza, and Tao, with some well made supporters (I'm a fan of the woman Joe Bonecrusher)., develop into an easy to root for and relate to main focus, drawing us into their lives and stories smoothly and with compelling interest. They end up in Gold Rush California, with them together some, but also with Eliza's taking on men's clothing and embarking on a search for her lover from Chile who preceded her to California, and whom she has no idea how to locate. Eliza's story, her Mother Lode adventures and life take us on a merry and sometimes frightening foray into the world of gold-crazy men and life. The journeys they each take make the reader want to keep going with them.

I am and have already purchased the `sequel' of sorts, Portrait in Sepia, knowing that in Allende's hands, I am in for a most enjoyable read.

What a great read, Isabel, absolutely captures the imagination of the reader. The "Daughter of Fortune" book has inspired me to travel to Chile and regions to explore the regions she speaks about. I have read every one of her books over the past 10 years, I have purchased them in printed format and also in audio format. I travel with my work and I listen to the books when on the plane or in the car. The audio which is read by Blair Brown is superb, with an accent that enhances the story. Each time I read the book or listen to the tapes, I am transported to another world and time.I would reccommend this book and author to anyone who enjoys a good read.

I am currently reading Daughter of Fortune, and I have loved it so far. Soiled Doves, the History of Prostitution in the Old West. I am not sugegsting plagarism, certainly not, what I am suggesting is that her research source is too apparent. I absolutely hate when I come to the end of a GOOD book and yearn for more. It is really fascinating (not lewd) reading about the culture of prostitution during America's gold rush. that's a sign the writer didn't bring things to a complete enough close. though, I am near the end of the story and I can already see there are not enough pages remaining for the plot to be summed up in a satisfactory way. Reading certain passages of Daughter of Fortune causes much too much similarity to the Soiled Doves History.

Reviews here on Amazon only reinforce my feeling. I want to add that it is clear the author did much of her research in one book. Anyway, if your interest is piqued over the prostitues and their lifesyles, I would recomend Soiled Doves, it is not a novel, but rather historical non-fiction.

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