The Marriage of Opposites, by Alice Hoffman (2015)
The Marriage of Opposites, by Alice Hoffman is the fictionalized account of the life of Rachel Monsanto PomiéPetit Pizzarro, the mother of Camille Pissarro, one of the Fathers of Impressionism. Rachel was born in the Jewish community on the island of St. Thomas in 1795. Her first husband was a widower many years older the Rachel. At the time of her marriage, she immediately became step-mother to his three children. Before she was 30 years old, she was widowed with seven children ~ three step-children and four of her own. Soon Abraham Gabriel Frédéric Pizzarro (known as Frédéric), a nephew of Rachel’s dead husband, moved to St. Thomas to run the family business. As a woman, Rachel had no rights to manage the business.
Rachel and Frédéric almost immediately fell in love, but do to religious reasons, were not permitted to marry. They were ostracized, but lived as husband and wife for years, before the religious community recognized their marriage. Together, Rachel and Frédéric had three children, bringing their household to 12. Their youngest child was named Jacobo Abraham Camille Pizzarro. (He changed the spelling of his name when he moved to France.)
The novel describes life in the paradise of St. Thomas during the early 1800s. Rachel’s best friend, Jestine, was the beautiful mixed-race daughter of the family’s cook. The novel touches on the life of slavery on the Islands. Jestine falls in love with Aaron, a distant relative of Rachel’s family. The love is mutual, but any marriage is forbidden for a host of reasons, which ultimately harbor a deep family secret.
The novel also weaves the myths and superstitions of the Islands into the everyday life of the Pizzarro family.
A beautiful read.
Read: May 8, 2018
5 Stars
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