Ben Crowell remembers the Great Caddo Lake Pearl Rush of 1874. He was fourteen that year, and his home, the riverboat community of Port Caddo, was dying. By the end of the summer, the pearl boom was over, Port Caddo was doomed, and the mystery over who killed Judd Kelso began. It took Ben forty years to solve the mystery, and once he did, the proof came only for him to witness. He is the only living soul who will know what happened that September night in 1874.
Why is 4.5 stars not an option! I loved the story so much, but it left me wanting so much more at the end? Where did Billy and Carol Anne go? What was their life? It wrapped up SO quickly and it was in the epilogue! Not even in the last chapter! Some chapters though were confusing, as to which POV they were being told in. I felt like it jumped around from Ben's POV to others, depending on whose story it was, but mostly it seemed like it was Ben. It gave such a great picture of what life was like then, a boy hitting maturity and seeing love, heartbreak, riches, loosing everything, murder and death of people he knew and cared about. Definitely would recommend, I finished it in 2 sittings!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This was another book club selection that I may not have read otherwise. Ignore the cover shown here, it is not a bodice ripper! It is a very good coming of age story based on historic events in the Texas-Louisiana Caddo lake area. I really enjoyed it.
I found this book in the dollar store and bought it because the author is from Marble Falls. I took it to the beach because it was the perfect size to read over the weekend. I knew nothing about it. I was so surprised! It was such a good read. I could hardly put it down. It had the right among of history, a murder mystery and a love story. It was well told by a true Texan. It reminded me of a Larry McMurtry novel. I will be looking for other books by this author. He is such a good storyteller!
Wonderful tale of the deep bayou south after the civil war, without pandering to the obvious topic of Reconstruction. The characters are colorful and believable, and I would like to read more about the story of Carol Ann and Billy Treat. Where did they go when they left Caddo Lake?
"Friendships that will resume in the afterlife." "It was that summer that I learned life would not always be simple, or fun, or easy. Neither would it always be complicated, or painful, or hard."
Summer of Pearls was such a good find for me. I was not entering it expecting much but was soon blown away at how Mike Blakely writes and unravels the story. The book made me dream of being in the old days, simply just hunting for pearls.