Από τό Σαν Φραντσίσκο της εποχής της οικονομικής κρίσης, με τις διαδηλώσεις και τα συσσίτια, ως το Βερολίνο των Ναζί, κι από τίς μεγαλόπρεπες κατοικίες της εκλεκτής κοινωνίας του Ράσιαν Χίλ ως τις φτωχογειτονιές του Λος Άντζελες —αυτός είναι ο χώρος μέσα στον οποίο κινείται το έργο του Φαστ «Δεύτερη Γενιά». Πρωταγωνίστρια στη σκηνή η Μπάρμπαρα, η κόρη του Νταν Λαβέτ —του ανθρώπου που έγινε πάμπλουτος από το τίποτα γιά να καταλήξει πάλι στο τίποτα— και της Τζην που έξακολουθεϊ να κάνει την αριστοκρατική της ζωή, χωρισμένη από τον άντρα της.
« Γεμάτο ζωντάνια καί δύναμη. Συναρπαστικό. Τό ενδιαφέρον βρίσκεται διαρκώς σε κορύφωση». SAN DIEGO UNION
«Γρήγορος ρυθμός. Συναρπάζει. Γεγονότα και χαρακτήρες δίνονται με τόση ζωντάνια και τέτοια λεπτομερειακή ανάλυση, ώστε να εκφράζεται όλο το βαθύτερο περιεχόμενο τους». LOS ANGELES TIMES
Howard Fast was one of the most prolific American writers of the twentieth century. He was a bestselling author of more than eighty works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and screenplays. The son of immigrants, Fast grew up in New York City and published his first novel upon finishing high school in 1933. In 1950, his refusal to provide the United States Congress with a list of possible Communist associates earned him a three-month prison sentence. During his incarceration, Fast wrote one of his best-known novels, Spartacus (1951). Throughout his long career, Fast matched his commitment to championing social justice in his writing with a deft, lively storytelling style.
Another page-turner by Howard Fast. Following up the first book in the series, (The Immigrants), as the title would imply, this is about the children of the Lavette family, particularly Barbara, that takes center stage this time. She makes for a good protagonist because she has trouble deciding what to do with her life and therefore tries everything under the sun. The novel takes place during the depression-era 1930s and on through World War II, so there is plenty of adventure to attract her, including several lengthy trips to foreign countries as part of her budding writing and journalism career.
But it’s not all about the younger set. There is still plenty of drama for the first generation to go through as well, particularly Dan, the main protagonist of book one. Additionally, I was surprised to see the turn that his first wife, the aristocratic Jean took, turning from a rather boilerplate character into a really interesting one.
This series continues to be a well-done portrayal of a family saga of immigrants wrestling with the tumultuous events of America in the 20th century. Some seek wealth or power while others seek purpose in life. Some achieve their goals while others miss the mark. Some lives are cut short. But always, the plot remains unpredictable.
Happily, there are several more books in the series, as I’ve become attached to the characters and am anxious to see what happens next. For me that's just about the highest praise I can offer.
I didn't realize this was the second book in a series until I had already started it. But I don't think reading the first book would have helped me at all to care about any of these characters.
While there are a multitude of people in this story, we're basically following Barbara Lavette. She's a woman blessed/cursed with powerful pheromones that causes every man she meets to fall in love with her, or least want to bed her. (The downside being she's a bit of a black widow to a couple of these guys who don't meet a good end.)
Barbara attempts to use her powers for good and combat the ebil Nazis, but her mission ends before it really even begins. (I never said she was smart.) She returns to America to deal with First World problems. Oh, the agony of inheriting millions of dollars. How I weep for you, Barbara.
Meanwhile other people fall in love, get divorced, fight in WWII, and die.
I don't understand how this was such a big seller back in the day. Everyone is paper thin. The war is happening way in the background so there's very little excitement. Even though Barbara has all these men falling at her feet, there are no sexy times. So what was the spell this book cast?
A succinctly written history lesson about the world during the 1930s. On the West Coast, soon after the depression, ship building as well as aircraft building became big business because of the threat of War with Germany. This story is also a family saga during these crucial years. I absolutely loved the book - could hardly put it down. The book was copy written in 1978 but we could make an overlay and place it over our current events and it would be a copy of our world today. The only thing missing would be the high tech work and play gadgets we currently use. Great book!!
3,5* Quite surprisingly similar idea to the century trilogy, from Ken Follett. I could imagine a film made from it ( maybe there is). Not many mishaps and I believe due to not possible to research so thoroughly at the time. But in general one could forget when it was written.
Read this for a book group. I gather that I might have enjoyed it more if I'd read the 1st book in the series "Immigrants" about the immigrant movers and shakers who made San Francisco what it was, but frankly I couldn't care less about the clumsily drawn characters in this volume, especially the heiress who is the central character and will be of the next 5 books in the Lavette family saga that Fast intended to be America's answer to the Forsythe Saga ( hint, the Forsythes are more interesting people). Things lose all believability at the point where our heroine goes to live in Paris, just happens to meet an editor for a magazine clearly meant to be a stand-in for the New Yorker (Manhattan something or other) & despite never having written anything more taxing than a college essay, is immediately offered a staff job which allows her to claim she is supporting herself and to launch a career as a revered novelist. Because of course that's how writers break into writing, not by submitting pitches after pitches to important magazines or collecting basketfuls of rejection letters. The only thing less convincing than that was the way every single woman in the story was exceptionally beautiful, THE singularly most beautiful woman in the world. Because every deserves the most singularly beautiful woman in the world. At this point we know we are deeply in male fantasy territory, not in a serious novel.
In THE IMMIGRANTS, Howard Fast began the story of the Lavettes, focusing on Dan and his wife, Jean. This second volume concentrates on their daughter, Barbara, and what adventures she has! From 1930s labor strife, to pre-WWII Paris to Calcutta to San Francisco, there is very little that doesn't make its way into Barbara Lavette's experience.
Howard Fast writes in a way that keeps one turning the pages. When you feel you've heard enough from one character, he focuses on someone else for a while. There is a vast tapestry of characters here, some of whom are only introduced with an eye toward their greater importance in later volumes of the series. Barbara is an amazing, interesting character, and I loved her immensely. I also came to admire Jean (a character I almost loathed in THE IMMIGRANTS) due to her steadily maturing nature in this second episode.
The sequence focusing on the D-Day landings at Normandy was excellently written and extremely exciting. It's very difficult to write about a battle without it being either overly dramatic or excruciatingly dull. Fast walks a very fine line here, brilliantly. He also mines his own experiences as a liberal, Jewish artist in the War years in order to provide anecdotes that drive the narrative. I can't wait to see what he does with the McCarthy era and HUAC in book number three, THE ESTABLISHMENT.
The Lavette family saga continues in book 2 through the Depression and World War II. Howard Fast is a superb storyteller. His vivid characters feel like family members. I'm looking forward to reading more from this series.
Great vintage book in the 2nd half 20th century style (1970's style): the big multi-generation family saga. Of course, a dash of WWII figuring in greatly. It is a slice of America's history, specifically a tale of how 2 California cities, LA and SF, evolved and grew: immigrants and industries and the people surrounding these. I was able to 'catch on' reading this second book without reading Lavette Family #1 book. Barbara Lavette is the main character. Through the years the reader meets her family: Danny and Jean, parents. Her step mother, May Ling. Other characters interwoven are the wine-growing Levy family, soldier of fortune Bernie Cohen. There's a theme of fairness and prejudice, a thread going through the novel: rich/poor, earned money/inheritance, Jews/WASPs. Why 4 stars? I felt the author infused more thoughts and more humanity into the female characters. The males were more props in Barbara's life journey. The trophy wife of Dan, May Ling, posed a little too much insecurity which I found vain/annoying at times. Sally Levy gradually seemed to tone it down a bit: for being so gutsy, she seemed at times to seek approval too much. I did find the description of Calcutta to be fascinating and shocking. It almost seemed like a virtual tour. On the whole, a very engaging read. I hope I can find this style of novel in future reads.
The second volume in the New York Times best-selling Immigrants saga. With the publication of The Immigrants, a most wonderful book, according to Harlan Ellison in the Los Angeles Times, Howard Fast once again proved himself to be one of America's most popular authors. Now, in Second Generation, Fast continues the story of Dan Lavette, the young Italian who lost his parents but launched a stormy and brilliant career as a result of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. This latest chapter encompasses an even more dramatic sweep of history, from the Depression years to the close of World War II. The central figure is Barbara Lavette, the beautiful daughter of Dan and his aristocratic first wife, Jean. Troubled by the conflicts of her dual inheritance and scornful of her mother's social world, Barbara sets out to build her own life in her own way, a way that leads her to a Europe on the brink of Nazi terror, to love and tragedy, to the farthest reaches of a global war, and ultimately to a deeper understanding of herself....
Sometime in the last couple of years I was lucky enough to find four more of the Lavette family series at a bookstore in our town. It’s been a while since I read the first book but again, I was amazed at the liveliness of Howard Fast’s characters and how easy it was to become familiar with those who already appeared in the prequel. This time the story takes place in the years right before, during and after World War II and as in the first novel, events of that time were woven into the plot’s happenings. Even though the end seemed a bit abrupt, I'm still giving this book 4 stars.
A neighbor gave me this series of books when I was looking for something to read. I read two of the books, this being the second, and found some good and bad things in the writing. The good thing I liked was how the author tied the story line in with actual historical events and how they impacted the stories characters. The bad thing was that the pacing of the story line was so slow I had a hard time staying awake. The introspection by the main characters is a little overdone. So, I will not be continuing on with the series.
For some reason I never read the Lavette family saga back in the 80s. It has kind of a 70s-80s feel, and I wasn't sure I would continue after The Immigrants, book 1. But this second book was much stronger than the first. Lkable characters. Lots of interesting history. Sagas, of course, tend to feel like soap operas sometimes because they cover so much time and so many characters. And Fast's is no exception.
Hhhhhhuuuuuummm. Got to the end of this book and my first though was wow. Loved the history. Learned more than I knew before. The personalities fascinated me. Good and bad. Boring world if we all were the same. No time to get bored and the people are all so different. Money isn't everything but makes the world go round. Found it a little longer than I'm used to. Would read again to pick up what I may have missed the first time around.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I was preparing to give this one four stars halfway through but in the second half I grew to really dislike Barbara. I never got so tired of hearing about how beautiful she was and I felt she got the best treatment from everyone because of it and the wealth she was born with. Of course Barbara didn’t care about any of that! I didn’t believe a word she told herself. I finally decided to go with four stars because I enjoyed every other character and the history.
4 stars. This book is the follow up to "The Immigrants" and was a very good read. The book takes place during WWII and some of the boys see combat, one stays home and becomes rich supplying the war effort, one of the girls becomes a war correspondent and sees the horrors of war close up. People love and people die. A well written book that kept me interested from first to last page.
This is the second installment of Howard Fast's Lavette family series of historical novels. Howard Fast is a master storyteller, and these historical novels include lots of details about their time period. I love big, sprawling family sagas, and the historical tie-ins give the characters a satisfying depth.
This second book focuses on Barbara Lavette, Dan's daughter. Secondarily, we see the children and grandchildren of the characters introduced in the first book, such as, the Levy's, Sheltons and Whittiers. The book also focuses on the various ethnic groups, all descendants of immigrants, coming together through marriage and other relationships.
DNF. I enjoyed The Immigrants but found this one uninteresting, mostly because the character Barbara is such a cliché. I finally gave up when plucky girl reporter goes to Berlin and ends up picked up by police (Gestapo?) for violently intervening in an atrocity against an old Jewish man, a scene right out of Nancy Drew, or some other plucky girl.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Questo secondo volume della saga dei Lavette è davvero molto più incalzante rispetto al primo. La storia moderna è protagonista della saga insieme ai personaggi principali. Spero che l'editore completi la pubblicazione di tutti i volumi scritti da Fast relativamente a questa famiglia.
Same characters, set during World War II. This one focusing on Dan's daughter, Barbara, who has become somewhat of an activist. She spent years in Paris writing for an American magazine, then had a harrowing experience in Germany, and settled back in San Francisco. This is her story.
This is a very good story of a combination of families living, and working together through life. They raise their children and the parents and partnersneirk hard to provide a good life.
I have really enjoyed this continuing story and am looking forward to reading the rest of the books in this series. Fast was a favorite of my parents and I find his books easy to read and they keep me interested.
The connection you form with the characters slow and complicated. The relationship and options you form mirrors reality, they are complex and constantly changing.
Very detailed, intricate, coming-of-age story. I liked the history aspect of it, as Fast shows several different perspectives of WWII. Sometimes the author went on tangents/provided too much detail that made me lose interest, but overall great classic historical fiction novel.
Wonderfully drawn characters. It continues the story of the Lanette family introduced in the first book, Set against the backdrop of the depression and WWII, the book provides various insights from the various characters’s perspectives