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| The Highest Price for Passion | 
enlarge | Author: Laurinda D. Brown Publisher: Strebor Books Category: Book
List Price: $13.00 Buy New: $2.42 You Save: $10.58 (81%)
New (43) Used (15) from $2.40
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 346093
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.2 x 1
ISBN: 1593090536 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781593090531 ASIN: 1593090536
Publication Date: August 5, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping
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Product Description
A century of unrest equals ten decades of change. The Highest Price for Passion reflects one hundred years of the most volatile era to divide American soil, interspersed with the uncontrollable fervor from the most unlikeliest of sources -- when both master and mistress vie for the affections of a slave too beautiful to destroy, with a quiet intelligence neither can outwit. Discover a time when the concept of family paled against the principle of human bondage. Fight for the cause. Die for the freedom...to live, to choose, to love. Unyielding. Uncompromising. Undeniable. These are the qualities that make The Highest Price for Passion...unforgettable.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Pretty good book September 2, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I enjoyed this book very much. Barely could put it down yet was mostly intrigued by the part that classifies this book as a lesbian book. I had no idea, I see that there were plenty of references to two Slave Masters to being gay and one situation where a Mistress to being gay but I'd hardly say that this was a good read. I enjoyed the book because too often in our oral history lessons we speak of how the Master's would use and abuse the Slave girls/women but hardly ever hear of the Mistress and Slave Men or the Master's and the Slave MEN... that to me, is real life. Yes the author jumped around a lot and if you were not paying attention you would get lost and I agree with L. Romich - the cover of the book makes you think the book is about something totaly different, you'd never guess it was set during slave times considering the woman on the cover is clean and of all things, has on a pair of crispy white panties... I don't think that the description of the book on the back is accurate either... after starting the book I had to go back and cross reference what was on the back with what I was reading the entire thinking... is this right? It's a good book, aside from the cover of the book, the description on the back and the indication that this is a lesbian book... it's a winner to me
Not quite what I thought... August 14, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
After a long and unknown delay (at least to me) this book makes it to the shelves. I saw this book probably 2 years ago and the cover jumped out grabbed my attention. The fact that it was being published by Strebor Books made its stock jump a few notches as well.
So when I saw it in my store I was very excited! At the very beginning this book has some bite because it was brutal, sexual, mean, and driven. Unfortunately it slowed down and slowed down QUICK! I'll tell you first the things that I did like. The story itself was good and the main characters (or so I thought) weren't spared when the story called for them to be beaten, raped, killed, shot at, humiliated, bought, sold, whatever! I appreciate when an author just goes with the story and lets it tell itself. I wish she would have stuck with that.
Now for the bad parts: I don't know if the publisher was just tired of waiting on this one, if the author was rushed to finish this or what but this was just not a good read. The author jumped around a lot between time periods and never really made it clear a lot of the time which character was narrating. She switched between first, second, and third person and that slowed things down a lot! Now, a lot of authors will tell the story from a number of different characters point of view, however, the storytelling between the characters in this book did not flow at all.
She would tell us about a slave and then jump to telling us the story from that slaves parent's point of view, and then from the slave's parent's point of view from the future (or past). In my opinion it was too much and had a lot to do with why this wasn't a very good book. This was one of those books where I REALLY wanted it to be good because there is a lot here to work with and I did like the premise, the violence, and the sexuality. Some of the deeds the author describes are just plain mean and extremely painful and that is why I was drawn to the first part of this book. I just wish it didn't stop. There was too much jumping around, uneven dialogue, rushed storyline, and not enough cohesiveness to make this a worthwhile investment, whether it be time or money.
One of the authors best! August 31, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book was very, very good. I loved the slavery setting. This book was different from any other lesbian books i've read. Who would have thought about writing about homosexuality and slavery? Great book!
The HIGHEST PRICE...... August 30, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Set back in the 1700's to 1800's, unfolds the story of a beautiful girl that was born to the white slave master and the handsome slave. It tells the story of a friendship that was one of a jealous nature and a love so strong that not even the unspoken rules of a white woman and a slave could stop the passion and love that had for one another, not even her husband. When he finds out he is hell bent on making them suffer. There is also and underlying story of how the slave masters would punish the slaves when they ran off, that kinda intertwines into this story. I'm not gonna say what it is, but I can honestly say I have never read about this in any of the southern/slave type stories I have ever read. It makes you really look at it a little differently.
This book was a fast read for me BUT the thing that I really had a hard time with is that this book was set back in the 1700's and I find it unbelievable that the slaves and owners would be cussing and using the words we hear today. Its just during that time period I am sure they probably had their own slang but highly unlikely they were using the words of today. That really threw the book off for me. Also the author kept going back and forth on the narration of the story. In looking at the cover you would have never known that this book was set back in this time period. All in all it was an okay read.
Kudos Laurinda! October 6, 2008 Ms. Brown has outdone herself again!! This book was a great read as usual!
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