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22 Friar Street
Nan DeVincent-Hayes

Flower Valley Press, 2001 - 250 pages

average customer review:based on 49 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





HOW DARE YOU !

All I could think after reading this book was HOW DARE YOU!

How dare you make me laugh, cry, and and get so involved in the story that I had to read it all in one sitting.

I couldn't put the book down once I started it and my kids kept asking what was so funny every time I would break out into laughter. I'm glad that nobody was paying much attention, they would have seen tears between the smiles and thought I was going crazy. I felt like I was on an emotional roller coaster.

Peggy, Mister, and Missus were all very real from the beginning and it was as if I was watching their lives unfold in person.

CONGRATULATIONS! It's a wonderful book....
Now may I please have control of my emotions again?



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Delightful

I could write so much about this wonderful book but to sum it up, it's one of the best novels I have read in at least the last ten years. Everything is neatly intertwined, and the author makes the characters loveable but still fawed. This book shows how race differences should really be handled--with love. Congratulations to the auhor for doing such a magnificent job. I loved the book!







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The Best of the Best!

I was caught up in this book the second I read the back cover. How many novels do you know that actually make you feel like you're right in the story with them, that what's going on is real and true to life? Well, this one does, and I can tell you that after reading it, I had a whole new apprecaitation for racial differences. DeVincent-Hayes make this story real, and she made me look at what it might be like on the "the other side." I just love this story. I wish [...]would pick it up for her book club and her Harpo would make it into a movie, I cried and broke into laughter in so many places in this story. Peggy is such a likeable character, even with all her flaws. Mr. Ellen is just like James Earl Jones, and Mrs. Ellen is so cool. This is a wonderful family story.


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What a glorious story!

Why is it that good books like this "22 Friar Street" aren't bestsellers? Is it because such a book isn't vulgar, profane, violent? Our society should want books like this that reflect on human relationships and show us not only in the good light, but also with all our flaws and shortcomings. The author of this book should win a Nobel for her superb writing skills and exceptional insight into humanity; more importantly, Oprah ought to celebrate it on her bookclub, and Ron Howard ought to make a movie out of it. It's a story that shows humanity in a clear light--what our expectations of each other are, what are stereotypes and preconceived notions consist of and how damanging they can be. Never have I ever run across a book that has gapped so many chasms as this book, such as blacks and whites, young and old, wealthy and poor, cultured and uncouth. This story just blew me away. In some places, I laughed so hard that people in the doctor's waiting room stared at me; in other places, tears rolled down my eyes. You have got to read this story! Great work, DeVincent-Hayes!


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What a Trip!

Whooowee! What a ride this story takes you on...unbelievable! Not only is it a roller coaster of a ride, but it has characters that you just fall in love with, even ol' meany Aunt Audrey who really doesn't hate Peggy after all. This book is like a wide beacon on dark seas because it shows how we can brighten up our beliefs and change society and fix all the inhumanity we often put on others. I loved Peggy and Mr/Mrs Ellen. This book sucks you in and keeps you glued to it without your even knowing it. Buy a copy for yourself; you won't be sorry. It's a true, wholesome family story and a quiet lesson in what it means to love each other despite cultural, racial, educational differences.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



This is a touching "Coming of Age" story about a white, female student, Peggy Dana, who belatedly accepts a basketball scholarship to the University of Maryland. Because she accepts her scholarship quite late, she can not obtain housing on campus. The only housing still available to her is with an older, childless black couple who live in the community. Peggy accepts it and her education quickly involves much more than her studies.

Emotionally scarred by an uncaring mother, assaulted by her mother's live-in boyfriend, Peggy enters the unknown new world of the Ellens. The Ellens, a refined, educated, concerned and caring couple hold Peggy to a higher standard than she has ever had to face before. This comfortable, but unfamiliar atmosphere proves to contain as many pitfalls and challenges as her previous unstructured life. Important lessons concerning race relations, cultural and age differences, vulnerability, integrity and true parental love unfold in a quick-paced tale with fascinating twists and turns. Ultimately, 22 Friar Street is an address not to be forgotten. As a place of hope, of family, of racial harmony, and straightforward, heartfelt love, 22 Friar Street feels like home.


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