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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The book is as interesting as it's title.
This book is fabulous. This was the first book I read about her crazy, intertwined Southern clan. Once I read this, all I wanted to do was sit down and read every book she ever wrote about these people. What impressed me the most was the descriptions of the emotions people felt throughout the story. Each of her characters has a distinct and slightly zany personality...
Published on January 7, 2000 by Polly

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3.0 out of 5 stars Sprawling novel by a writer with more talent than discipline
Daniel, handsome, just sub-50, an alcoholic, miserable in love but still in there pitching, scion of a wealthy and Gothic southern family nearing genteel bankruptcy, is the focus of a sprawling and at times tedious novel by a writer with much more talent than discipline.

Daughter Jessie, barely into her 20s, has just had a baby with a reckless youth doing his...
Published 20 months ago by Martha Freeman


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The book is as interesting as it's title., January 7, 2000
By 
This book is fabulous. This was the first book I read about her crazy, intertwined Southern clan. Once I read this, all I wanted to do was sit down and read every book she ever wrote about these people. What impressed me the most was the descriptions of the emotions people felt throughout the story. Each of her characters has a distinct and slightly zany personality. Equipped with a wide range of strong emotions, they all are pondering major life decisions throughout the book. She blends the three stories together masterfully. As I read her other books, I am impressed with how she creates an entire world that revolves around a massive network of characters who are all related by blood or situtation. In case you can't keep up, use the family tree at the front of Starcarbon.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars glorious southern disfunctional family..(what else?), July 30, 1998
By A Customer
I have just discovered how to connect onto Amazon.com and I am thrilled to be able to get (and give) so much information on READINGS! One of the first authors I looked into wasd one of my very favorites, Ellen Gilchrist. I typed in Starcarbon randomly (I have read all of her works) and was amazed to find that noone had reviewed it. Although it's been a fre years since I read it and had tro go back to my notes to refresh my memory, the enthusiasm I felt (feel) for this book is current. The story is a continuation in the vibrant and evey so interesting lives of the Hand family (We were introduced to them in earlier books). The protagonist is Olivia deHavilland Hand, a young woman, whose mother is a Cherokee Indian. Although the better part of the book deals with her dropping out of Carolina and her going back to Oklahoma (where her tribe lives) to get a better handle on who SHE is , we are reintroduced to other menbers of her family Before Rebecca West had th! e Yaya's, Ellen Gilchrist has the Hand Family. Someos its various settings are New Orleans, Boston, Charlotte - and all of them come alive, as do the wonderful Hands. I particularly appreciated the family chart in the front of this book so that I could connect to the family faster when new books come out. Anyone wanting a sample of Gilchrist's should try her short stories in IN THE LAND OF DREAMY DREAMS. Y'all enjoy!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Story, Great Writing, July 25, 2001
By A Customer
I actually read this novel without knowing that it followed a previous work of Ellen Gilchrist's. However, I STILL enjoyed it immensely. Starcarbon is intellectual and interesting and moves at a quick over-lapping pace. I often fold over a small corner of a page when I read an interesting bit of prose to go back to later - page after page is dog-earred in my copy of this book. Don't be alarmed by the family tree outlined in the first few pages; it is easy enough to follow along. You'll find yourself in several heads during the course of this book - even if it gets confusing, enjoy the writing and ride it out.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Sprawling novel by a writer with more talent than discipline, June 10, 2010
Daniel, handsome, just sub-50, an alcoholic, miserable in love but still in there pitching, scion of a wealthy and Gothic southern family nearing genteel bankruptcy, is the focus of a sprawling and at times tedious novel by a writer with much more talent than discipline.

Daughter Jessie, barely into her 20s, has just had a baby with a reckless youth doing his best against long odds to settle down. Daughter Olivia -- who gets the most screen time, but this seems almost accidental -- is in love with a cowboy but tortured by indecision over where she fits. She was romantically raised by her late mother's Cherokee family in Oklahoma. her father only learned of her existence when she was in high school.

There are lots more characters, and all of them have too much to say. It's another book that dares to include scenes in the therapist's office -- please do spare us these wise and patient therapists! Still, the writing is assured and the characters, from Cherokee grandpas to New Orleans dope dealers to Irish poets in love are all credible.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The sweep of a saga, the intimacy of a song, August 23, 2005
By 
grrlpup (Portland, Oregon, USA) - See all my reviews
I have been reading all of Ellen Gilchrist's books in the order they were written, so I was familiar with Olivia, Jessie, Helen, and many of the other characters in this book. Continuing the family saga was a rich, satisfying experience. There was new gossip, new plot twists, but also a deepening of the characterizations. Olivia is more her own person and less the unhappy rebel thrown into the family. Helen is in love, and blossoms.

I especially liked the variety of settings in the different storylines. King and Jessie are in New Orleans, Helen is in Boston, and Olivia is back in Oklahoma, where the heart and meat of the book take place. Only a few pages take place at the Starcarbon Ranch in Montana, yet the beautiful description makes it permeate the book, idealized like the Garden of Eden.

The minor characters get enough loving attention from the author that I'd like to see more of them and feel like they'd be just as rich as the main characters-- the brother Niall, in particular.

There's a little less glorification of gee-whiz science in this book than there was in Gilchrist's books about Anna Hand, and I'm glad about that. I felt the number of psychiatrists and the spouting of their theories, however, got to be a little much. It also made the book feel somewhat dated, back to the 1950s or 1970s when psychoanalysis was in vogue.

I finished the book hoping I'd see these characters again, and wanting to visit the places in this book.
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Starcarbon
Starcarbon by Ellen Gilchrist (Paperback - 1996)
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