Description
Chantel Reed is a successful human resources professional in Seattle who has a hard time with relationships. She has drifted from her friends Astrid and Serenity after the death of their friend Alison; her oldest sister, Daria, the family’s maternal figure, is prickly and controlling; and she finally breaks up with her slacker boyfriend, Cameron, after she finds him cooking dinner for another woman in her apartment. Astrid and Serenity have different ideas about how Chantel should move on after the breakup. Chantel, who has always dated black men, is initially hesitant when Brandon, a white guy, asks her out. She quickly falls for him, and they come close to marriage despite push back from her family and racism from his. But when Brandon and Daria ask an attractive black man to test Chantel’s loyalty, her trust in everyone is shattered. Chantel enters a self-destructive spiral that wreaks havoc on her professional and personal lives in search of the history behind broken relationships past and pressent, within her secrative family.
Emunah La-Paz brings this cast of characters to life on the page, with each one somehow more memorable than the last. They bring to light a comment on interracial relationships that is just as enjoyable to read as it is poignant.
An intro to the prequel.
Featuring Chocolate Recipe and upcoming chocolate website from the characters. Redvelvetseattle.com
More Information
Rights Information
Chocolate burnout.
Type of Work: | Text |
---|---|
Registration Number / Date: | TXu000855800 / 1998-05-15 |
Title: | Chocolate burnout. |
Description: | 1 v. |
Copyright Claimant: | Vicki LaShay Williams, 1971- |
Date of Creation: | 1996 |
Names: | Williams, Vicki LaShay, 1971- |
Chocolate Burnout:
Chocolate 4 Life
1-10852977951
Reviews
In La-Paz’s novel, an African American woman faces challenges in dating and friendship.
Chantel Reed is a successful human resources professional in Seattle who has a hard time with relationships. She has drifted from her friends Astrid and Serenity after the death of their friend Alison; her oldest sister, Daria, the family’s maternal figure, is prickly and controlling; and she finally breaks up with her slacker boyfriend, Cameron, after she finds him cooking dinner for another woman in her apartment. Astrid and Serenity have different ideas about how Chantel should move on after the breakup. Chantel, who has always dated black men, is initially hesitant when Brandon, a white guy, asks her out. She quickly falls for him, and they come close to marriage despite push back from her family and racism from his. But when Brandon and Daria ask an attractive black man to test Chantel’s loyalty, her trust in everyone is shattered. Chantel enters a self-destructive spiral that wreaks havoc on her professional and personal lives. La-Paz has a talent for metaphor (“My novel had been deterred, so to speak, due to the fact that I was too caught up inside of my own memoir, centered on my private, addictive, captivity of the mind”) that makes this an enjoyable read. La-Paz also does a good job of exploring the challenges of female friendships and interracial relationships, although Chantel’s tendencies to misjudge and make bad decisions make her an unsuitable vehicle for exploring those challenges since her relationships are dysfunctional. The reader may find the frequency of those bad decisions grating as Chantel becomes more and more incapable of acting in her best interests, but sections written from Astrid’s and Serenity’s points of view provide welcome relief. The novel shows some evidence of updates since its original publication that lead to minor inconsistencies (for instance, characters both page and text each other), but overall the story has a timeless quality and relevancy that keep it from feeling dated and make it appealing to contemporary readers.
A well-written novel with a frustratingly inept lead.
Kirkus Reviews
Author Biography
Emunah La-Paz (meaning Faith of Peace; born Vicki L. Williams on November 6, 1971) is an American author. Her first book Chocolate Burnout [1] embraces multi-cultural heritage, and is recognized in the Mavin foundation database of books by authors who touch on interracial relationships. In 2011, La-Paz published the book, Why Do Married Men Cheat with Unattractive Women?, a story based on real life events about a beautiful supermodel that becomes baffled when her husband leaves her for a so-called "unattractive woman". The book, based on the original blog, follows a woman as she tries to move on after her bitter and very public break-up.
Copyright Information
Chocolate burnout.
Type of Work: | Text |
---|---|
Registration Number / Date: | TXu000855800 / 1998-05-15 |
Title: | Chocolate burnout. |
Description: | 1 v. |
Copyright Claimant: | Vicki LaShay Williams, 1971- |
Date of Creation: | 1996 |
Names: | Williams, Vicki LaShay, 1971- |
Chocolate Burnout:
Chocolate 4 Life
1-10852977951
Little Ant Productions LLC
LITTLE ANT PRODUCTIONS LLC. We have a passion for novels and movies World Wide. Our Sister Company is Hubbard Small Press Publications LLC.
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Bibliographic Information
- Publisher Hubbard Small Press Publications
- Publication Date May 2022
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9780578994857 / 0998275565
- Publication Country or regionUnited States
- FormatPaperback
- Primary Price 18 USD
- ReadershipGeneral
- Publish StatusUnpublished
- Original Language TitleEnglish
- Original Language AuthorsEnglish
- EditionPart 1 Novel In it's Entirety
- Copyright Year1995
- Series1
- Series Part1
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