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Book reviews for "Campbell,_Bebe_Moore" sorted by average review score:

Successful Women, Angry Men
Published in Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (12 December, 2000)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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A must read!
The first time I read this book it had a white woman on the cover dressed in corporate attire. After reading the first few pages I knew something was up...I checked the back cover, no author photo, hmmmm. I was sure it was written by one of our own, and sure enough, a couple years later when Bebe Moore's Fiction came out I put the name together. No one could tell this truth like a sistah. The written unadulterated truth. Why our men, no matter how often they claim to offer 100% support still are uncomfortable with their women having too much success. Successful Women, Angry Men is a serious must read for every woman, but especially the black woman, who has a legacy of being strong and independent. This book not only identifies the problems that arise out of two income households but also how to subjugate them before they start. Bravo MS. Campbell! And thank you to the publisher for bringing this book out of hiding...now, if we could just get a high powered sistah on the front cover, briefcase in one hand, cell phone in the other, we'd be in business.


Your Blues Ain't Like Mine
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Ballantine Books (1995)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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A very good novel that should have been great
"Your Blues Ain't Like Mine" is an ambitious novel. It begins with the murder of an African-American teenager in rural Mississippi in the 1950's. It then follows the boy's family, the family of the murderers, and other citizens of that small Mississippi town, for the next 40 years or so. Many of the Blacks in the story move north to Chicago during this period. So the story describes not only the social and political changes in the deep South during those years, but also the experience of those who exchanged the seething racism of Mississippi for the northern big-city ghettos.

In choosing to portray such a vast - and critically important - period of American history, the author set herself a daunting task. There is a tremendous amount of material to cover in a novel like this. And the job can't be done thoroughly in 460 paperback pages. The author often condenses a major change in a character's lifestyle or philosophy into a single paragraph or even a single sentence.

The characters are well chosen and sympathetic (except the characters who weren't intended to be sympathetic), and the book is well written and well plotted. But for myself, I found myself wanting much more than Ms. Campbell was giving me. I suppose that a 1200-page novel wouldn't have sold nearly as well as this shorter one. But a 1200-page novel, on the same subject and by the same author, might have been a historically great achievement.

Now you know why Your Blues Ain't Like Mine.
This book is a definate must have. From the opening line to the last sentance, Campbell keeps you interested in the lives of her characters. Although fiction, this book speaks of the lives of many Black southerners including the mass exodus to Chicago as well as those who stayed to endure the hardships of being Black in the South. The contrast of the lives of "upper" and "lower" class white southerners put an all too real spin on the views of society. Some of these views are still in place today. The family of Armstrong Todd showed us that a united family can achieve. They also showed us that without that unity the family would surely fall. The intersection of the lives of Ida and Clayton made the story complete in the lives of southern america. It has been several months since I read the book and it is still the first book I recommend to my fellow bookworms. My one rule for reading a book is that, "If I can put it down and don't remember to pick it up again, it is not worth reading". I picked up this book time and time again. In fact, it was harder putting it down. I usually enjoy horror (anything by Stehpen King). The descriptive styles of writing in both authors are similar. I was simply pulled into the lives of the characters of the story. Well done Ms. Campbell...well done!

A very compassionate book!
This is the first book by Bebe Moore Campbell I have ever read and I fully intend to read the others. I felt that she had a very deep connection with all of her characters, regardlesss of color. I have read some black others that wrote with an obvious bias, and with this book I felt none of that. I also thought she did an excellent job of portraying the woman's role in a marriage and in society. I noticed that in with both the black and the white characters the woman were going through very similar trials. It was very interesting that when it came to an issue of social class as the years went on that the citizens of Hopewell became divided by how much money they had and no longer by the color of their skin. It just shows that money still transcends everyhting else to determine one's role in the social pyramid. Overall I would recommend this book to anyone, it gives a true understanding of the process of desegregation and the mindset people were living in.


Sweet Summer: Growing Up With & Without My Dad
Published in Paperback by Gold Medal (1996)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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A Powerful Book
Bebe Moore Campbell writes from personal expierance in the novel, Sweet Summer. Campbell tells about growing up as an African American girl living in the South during the 60's. Through this story I learned the prejudice of racism, the struggle of growing up with a divoraced family, and the will to live life. This story touched my heart, because it provided me to a differnt point of view about life.

Moore Campbell's Masterpiece
Once in a great while - about as often as Halley's Comet - a book comes along which stirs the soul and rattles your heart; a book which can transcend race, gender, age, place and time. This is such a book. Moore-Campbell is a magnificent writer; her verses poetic, her theme universal. Her autobiogrophy tells the story of growing up black and young without a full-time father, and the affects it can have on a child. It's not just her story; she shares this life with her cousin Michael (again, young and black without a full-time father), their Mothers, Grandmothers, Aunts, and assorted 'father figures': Dads, Uncles, Reverands, Neighbors. One child (BeBe) can learn to adapt graciously, while the other (Michael) has a tougher time, as they each learn difficult 'truths' about their patriarchy. Beautifully written, the reader hangs on every word, as this wonderful story unfolds.

WONDERFUL
This is a wonderful book and I recommend it to any one out there living or growing up with and without a father.


Brothers & Sisters
Published in Paperback by Smithmark Publishing (1996)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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Modern Day Morality Play
If this novel is any indication of Bebe Moore Campbell's talent, I think she's bound for an exciting and prolific career. Set in L.A. in the aftermath of the infamous Rodney King verdict, BROTHERS AND SISTERS introduces the reader to a banking world filled with interesting and complex characters both Black and White. Campbell has an excellent ability to traverse modern day racial complexities in a manner which is neither unrealistic nor condescending. Any Black female professional is bound to identify with the struggles and situations that Ester faces in the book: trust issues with White co-workers, dating a blue-collar man, walking the colorline, and maintaining personal dignity in a workspace where nobody looks like you. I found the novel to be enjoyable and insightful. It's perfect reading for a long plane ride.

One of the BEST books that I have ever read!
This one hits all the dilemmas of an African-American woman in middle management in corporate America - developing white friendships, being torn in those friendships when race becomes a factor, the fine-line definitions of sexual harassment, trying to help and hire other African-Americans, trying to support other African-Americans who have "made it" and may have forgotten how to help others, develpong romantic relationships with men with lesser educational backgrounds, trying to understand the African-American male preference for the white women, dealing with how much power one doesn't have in the final analysis - it's all there. A great book!

Campbell's Brothers & Siters is a 'can not put down book.'
Campbell's Brothers and Sisters is a great book, it depicts the relationships between blacks and whites at a very heated time: the Rodney King riot. This book raises many issues that the American people today must face and overcome..... I truly enjoyed this book and I found that it is very hard to put down. I recommend this book to everyone who can read and understand literature, in other words this book is a must read book for everyone!! Please read the book for those who haven't read it, and for those who have tell me what you think of the book and what other issues and questions this book raises. E-mail me with your response! Areggae@aol.com


What You Owe Me
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group (2001)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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A very soul-searching and inspiring book
Bebe Moore Campbell's writing style is just as interesting as ever. I liked this story about a young Jewish immigrant and Holocaust survivor, Gilda, who befriends an African American, Hosanna, in Los Angeles, CA. She presents us with the beginning of a friendship which grows into a patnership in a small cosmetic buisness. Unfortunately, their friendship is abruptly ended due to some interferance by Gilda's uncle and first husband. So obviously, there are hard feelings felt by Hosanna who struggles to keep her buisness going, but runs into many road-blocks experienced by many would-be African-American buiness entrepreneurs at that time. Campbell does a spectacular job featuring the lives of Hosanna's daughters, Vonette and Matriece, along with other somewhat significant characters in the cosmetic buisness owned by Gilda. What stands out in this book, is how Campbell showed how one gets overwhelmed by grudges. One is unable to function properly, follow their own dreams, and as a result runs away from various issues in life. I liked how she tied in the issues of betrayal by fathers to their children, and how they were able to workout such sticky issues.
The book deals with people with dreams, how they fight to keep these dreams alive. In addition, it showed the simplicity of a family that is overflowing with love and great family principles (Vonette's family) as well as what happens when we live our lives in continous denial (Blair's family). I recommend this book for anyone who wants to think about soceital issues with some history, who has dreams,and would cry or just laugh at some of the characters in the book. It is a fun book to read.

Classic Revenge
When you look at this book you may gawk at the length but as you read you will forget about the size and be mesmerized by the story. What You Owe Me is the story of Hosanna Clark and Gilda Rosenstein. One black, one Jewish, both determined to become successful businesswomen at the end of World War II. Hosanna has the desire while Gilda has the formulas to form a cosmetic company.

Fast forward to Matriece "Triesey" Carter, she is the daughter of Hosanna. Matriece makes it her personal mission to avenge what she believes is Gilda's betrayal of her mother. This is done at the expense of her relationships with others.

There are many other characters with their own stories. Campbell weaves this tale so that everything and everyone's story has closure and just maybe a little too "happily ever after". You have Vonette, Matriece's sister, and her Mexican brood who was not interested in Hosanna's dreams. Uncle Tuney, Hosanna's brother, and his decades-long litigation against a Texas magnate to regain his family's land. Blair, Matriece's friend from the old neighborhood who "made it". Mooney, Hosanna's financial "backer". The Montgomery family, a rhythm and blues star, Gilda's children and a host of other characters. There is more to say about the characters and their stories but to do that would give the story away and this is must read from a fabulous author.

I enjoyed how the book opened and ended with the voice of Hosanna. She boldly claims "closure is what I'm seeking. Death ain't nothing but another opportunity." What You Owe Me should appeal to all because demonstrated are relationships across racial and economic lines and also some classism within a class. Campbell demonstrates that money can not buy happiness and love but love of family, despite material wealth, can bring so much joy.

This is an excellent selection for any reading group, as it would provide a lively and lengthy discussion. This is a moving account of betrayal, love and healing.

Engaging Drama
"What You Owe Me" is an engaging five-hundred-thirty-three page drama that was well worth the wait. While having the multi-layered developmental syle of the master storyteller, Morrison, [Toni], Campbell's books are far easier to read, and have such a natural flow that they become can't-put-down books. Campbell's gift is her ability to make characters in her book come to life. In each of her books, the character's voice is clear and distinctive.

As a writer, who happens to be Black, Campbell delivers a well-written story for readers, regardless of ethnicity.

Ms. Campbell's personal appearance exudes meticulousness, which is even more apparent in her writing. Campbell is obviously dedicated to her craft and takes pride in producing quality not quantity. Again, "What You Owe Me" was worth the wait.

I can't wait 'till my book group discusses "What You Owe Me," as I'm anxious to hear whether or not they share my opinion.

If I were to rank Ms. Campbell: Tied for #1 Your Blues Ain't Like Mine, & What You Owe Me, #2 Sweet Summer, #3 Brothers and Sisters, #4 Singing in the Come Back Choir.

I've alreay cast the movie. However, a television series would work.


Singing in the Comeback Choir
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (1999)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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Flat & predictable, can this be the same Campbell?
The story is about Maxine, a black woman executive producer of a TV talk show who has a great life on the surface but is dealing with problems on several fronts. Her show is in danger of being cancelled. The grandmother who raised her, a famous singer from an earlier generation, has lost hope after she had a stroke. And she's still trying to forgive her otherwise wonderful husband Satchel for cheating on her.

This book disappointed me. When I read Campbell's "Your Blues Ain't Like Mine," I became a fan of her ability to bring to life many and varied characters, drawing out their different points of view. I was especially impressed with the way she helped you to understand the most unsympathetic of characters. In this book, and to a lesser degree her last one, "Brothers and Sisters," the characters seem one-dimensional and flat. The story is fairly predictable and, when everything works out just grand in the end, formulaic and unbelievable. The dialog is stiff, even telegraphic, especially the phone calls between Maxine and Satchel when Maxine is visiting her grandmother. The book was easy to breeze through, but in the end, it wasn't very satisfying.

Bebe Moore Campbell Serves Up an Uplifting Gospel Chorus

Enthusiasts of Campbell's novels depicting American life through the lens of a race-conscious society may initially be disappointed in her latest offering, Singing in the Comeback Choir. When compared to her earlier efforts, Your Blues Ain't Like Mine and Sweet Summer, her newest book seems to avoid the hard-hitting racial conflicts that formed the nucleus of those works. Nevertheless, Singing in the Comeback Choir provides an intimate view of a recurring theme in contemporary African-American life-the struggle to move forward in the white world without disavowing the past and the African-American community. When we are first introduced to Maxine McCoy, she exemplifies the lives of many upwardly mobile black professionals. Despite the gentrified façade, Maxine's life is in complete upheaval. She is pregnant and struggling to rebuild her marriage, her job as a television producer is jeopardized by flagging ratings, and her elderly grandmother has fallen ill and has not fully recovered. Torn between her job responsibilities and her commitment to her family, Maxine journeys to her childhood home to help her grandmother, Lindy, through her convalescence. When she is confronted with her old neighborhood, she is shocked to see that the effects of urban blight have robbed the street and its denizens of hope, in the same way that illness, hard living, and shattered dreams have robbed her grandmother of her vitality.

While Singing in the Comeback Choir does not have the moving pathos of the racial strife depicted in Your Blues Ain't Like Mine or the easy simplicity of her recollection of her relationship with her father in Sweet Summer, it navigates the diverse emotions of contemporary life with ease. Readers who have struggled to maintain their affiliation with family and community while fulfilling their job responsibilities will undoubtedly identify with Maxine's dilemma. Men and women who have weighed their life on the "fast track" versus their idealistic impulses will re!cognize this dichotomy in Maxine. With her deft characterization and moving plot, Campbell weaves a tight tapestry in which Maxine, her family, her job, and her community all contribute to the richness of the story's fabric. In the end, Singing in the Comeback Choir leaves the reader with a strong message of hope and faith that is both uplifting and inspiring. Your Blues Ain't Like Mine characterized the mournful blues and jazz riffs of the 1940's. Sweet Summer evoked the ebullient melodies of 1950's rock and roll. In Singing in the Comeback Choir, Bebe Moore Campbell serves up the intricate, rousing harmonies of gospel music in a way that makes her readers want to shout. Can I get an "Amen?"

A True Come Back
This is the second book I have heard on tape by Bebe Campbell Moore and I thought it was wonderful. She showed a true devotion to her career and her family. This book is a definite portrayal of how women struggle to balance their career as well as their personal life. I truly admire and respect how Maxine managed to juggle her career with the Ted Graham Show, overlook and stay with her once cheating husband, and take care of her long distant aging grandmother Lindy, all while being pregnant. I really loved how Lindy, as stubborn as she was, finally realized it is never too late to Come Back and be loved. Let's not forget how the once beautiful neighborhood, turn drug infested, managed to come together and clean up its act. Singing in the Come Back Choir is rich in character and in content. I just bought the book, Your Blues Ain't Like Mine, by this author and can't wait to read it!


Toxin
Published in Audio Cassette by Putnam Pub Group (Audio) (1998)
Authors: Robin Cook, Jason Culp, and Bebe Moore Campbell
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Pretty good, but the ending made me throw the book down!
This was a good book, but it definitely had three problems. 1- The multi-personality doc was unbelievable, resembling a whiny superhero. 2- The writing was so contrary. Cook has a large vocabulary, even sometimes he's too perfect with the grammar in the conversation. Yet, most of the dialogue is followed by "Tracy said, Reggis said, Tracy said, Becky said, Kelly said". Does Cook know of any other word to use besides "said" after quotation?

And the third problem was the ENDING! It ruined the book AND cost the book two stars on my rating. My hand was turning the pages at a mile a minute and then stopped at the ending. The story just fell into an empty space, not resolving the problem, no conclusion, nothing. UGH! I threw the book down in disgust.

Now you're asking why did I rate it with 3 stars. I couldn't put the book down (until the end, explained earlier). Cook's use of setting, conflict, and description was phenomenal. I really felt like I was in the scenes. The author merged a narrative medical drama with expository information about the steer-to-hamburger process. The "bridge" that melded the two and made the story work was the conflict of: the doctor's attempt to uncover E. Coli contamination versus the USDA and beef industry alliance's attempt to keep the contamination secret, in order to maintain their profits. If an ending was included in the book, it would be worthy of five stars.

This won't be the best book you'll ever read, but it's nonstop action and exploration through the beef industry will make you think next time you take a bite into that Big Mac.

Toxin On Tape is Terrific
The first time I read a Robin Cook novel I was mesmerized. I had picked it up at a garage sale a few years back for a liesurely weekend read. When I visited the Festus Public Library in Festus, Missouri and found two copies of Toxin on audio tape I had to pick one up.
Reader, Jason Culp brings a lot of genuine style and sincere emotion to the reading of Toxin. Jason uses subtle inflections in voice to create a plethora of realistic characters. He also reads at a satisfying pace, allowing me to enjoy his tape as I work.
The tape also includes a few extra features not available in the book. Helpful background effects like the skating rink music, or a country and western tavern setting also bring the reading to life. The tenuous strain of "danger music" also helped regulate my heartbeat at peaks of action in the book. I really liked these extras.
Finally, even though the recording was abridged, it holds true to the story and Robin Cook's style. His characters are realistically human, possessing qualities that might make them a bit unlikeable in real life, but endearing us to them in his stories. The topics of his story are haunting and surreal, sometimes reflecting real life horrors, such as E-Coli and the Mad Cow disease rampant in the news still today.
I recommend this version of the book for all the same reasons Cook fans love his books. Being able to enjoy a book in the middle of rush hour traffic or other preoccupying situations is a welcome benefit.

One of Cook's Best
Cardiologist Dr. Kim Reggis picks up his daughter Becky at her mother's place so that the pair can spend the weekend together. Their time together begins by him taking her to her favorite burger joint where she enjoys a gourmet's delight, a fast food meal. Later on that evening, Becky complains of stomach trouble. Kim takes her to her doctor. Following the medical visit, the little girl worsens. Subsequently, he rushes her to the hospital where, shockingly, the little girl falls into a coma and dies.

Kim is stunned and vows to learn what happened to his daughter. He soon discovers that Becky died from contaminated meat. Kim also learns that the government watchdog, the USDA works closely with the beef industry. As he digs deeper, powerful government and private interests try to end his investigation by any means necessary, including murder.

TOXIN is Robin Cook at his absolute best. The one-sitting story line is filled with action that comes out of today's headlines. The characters are genuine and their motives understandable, especially the distraught Kim. Fans of medical thrillers, or anyone who reads this book will think very seriously about turning vegetarian.

Harriet Klausner


Backlash Marriage: The Two Career Family Under Siege
Published in Hardcover by Random House Trade (1987)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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Sweet Summer: Growing Up with and Without My Dad
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Publishers (19 April, 1990)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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Sweet Summer
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Ballantine Books (1996)
Author: Bebe Moore Campbell
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