![]() Jumping back to the beginning, once Celine is done waxing poetic about how much she loves slave labor, she returns to her house. And just all-around inane, a fact I will now demonstrate. The whole time I was reading this book, I just kept thinking “why, Jill? Why are you doing this to me?” And the thing is, this book isn’t even terrible-it’s just really, really mediocre. Honestly, I found this 1996 publication rather more upsetting than any number of Old School “bodice rippers” I’ve had the chance to sample. Alas, hindsight.ĭay Dreamer, as one might have gathered already, isn’t a book that stands up well to the test of time. ![]() That should have been my clue to Get The Fuck Out. The book opens with the heroine, Celine, walking through New Orleans and and thinking to herself about what a “pleasure” it was to see the slaves and freedmen working together so efficiently. ![]()
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