Satin Doll

A Novel

Fiction & Literature, African American, Romance
Cover of the book Satin Doll by Karen E. Quinones Miller, Simon & Schuster
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Karen E. Quinones Miller ISBN: 9780743217453
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Publication: October 26, 2001
Imprint: Simon & Schuster Language: English
Author: Karen E. Quinones Miller
ISBN: 9780743217453
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication: October 26, 2001
Imprint: Simon & Schuster
Language: English

Satin Doll is a witty, insightful, heartbreaking and honest tale about romantic relationships, friendships, and class distinctions.

Bang! Being shot in the middle of the night and left for dead is what it took to open her eyes. Until that fateful moment, Regina Harris lived la vida loca with pimps and hustlers, a gangster lifestyle that supplied the money she needed to get high and forget the poverty of Harlem. Now she has turned her life around, is a college graduate and freelance journalist, and makes enough money to live on the Upper West Side and hob- nob with the city's movers and shakers. She's become the classy Satin Doll of the Duke Ellington song. But she can't forget where she came from: her three best friends are from the old neighborhood.
The Harlem homegirls. Regina tries to give emotional support to each of her friends as they deal with their own personal issues: Yvonne is a single mother looking for the right man. Tamika must raise two children alone while their father does time in jail for robbery. Puddin' lives her life by picking up men and smoking weed.
Living in two worlds; comfortable in neither. On a night out partying with her homegirls in Harlem, Regina meets aspiring lawyer Charles Whitfield, son of a pro-minent, upper-class black family in Philadelphia. He loves her but not her rough-around-the-edges friends. She loves him but doesn't think she can live up to his family's expectations.
Regina tries desperately to hide her former life, but when her past is revealed, it threatens to destroy her relationship with Charles and the life she has worked hard to create.

From its dramatic beginning to the fateful ending, Satin Doll is a witty and truthful take on relationships, friendships, and class distinctions.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Satin Doll is a witty, insightful, heartbreaking and honest tale about romantic relationships, friendships, and class distinctions.

Bang! Being shot in the middle of the night and left for dead is what it took to open her eyes. Until that fateful moment, Regina Harris lived la vida loca with pimps and hustlers, a gangster lifestyle that supplied the money she needed to get high and forget the poverty of Harlem. Now she has turned her life around, is a college graduate and freelance journalist, and makes enough money to live on the Upper West Side and hob- nob with the city's movers and shakers. She's become the classy Satin Doll of the Duke Ellington song. But she can't forget where she came from: her three best friends are from the old neighborhood.
The Harlem homegirls. Regina tries to give emotional support to each of her friends as they deal with their own personal issues: Yvonne is a single mother looking for the right man. Tamika must raise two children alone while their father does time in jail for robbery. Puddin' lives her life by picking up men and smoking weed.
Living in two worlds; comfortable in neither. On a night out partying with her homegirls in Harlem, Regina meets aspiring lawyer Charles Whitfield, son of a pro-minent, upper-class black family in Philadelphia. He loves her but not her rough-around-the-edges friends. She loves him but doesn't think she can live up to his family's expectations.
Regina tries desperately to hide her former life, but when her past is revealed, it threatens to destroy her relationship with Charles and the life she has worked hard to create.

From its dramatic beginning to the fateful ending, Satin Doll is a witty and truthful take on relationships, friendships, and class distinctions.

More books from Simon & Schuster

Cover of the book Lady Oracle by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Tales of the Rot & Ruin by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Dancing Girls by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Paradise by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Ada Lace, Take Me to Your Leader by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Throw Like A Girl by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Why Do Kittens Purr? by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book The Philosopher and the Druids by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book The Good Earth by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Goal Line by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book YOU GOTTA PLAY HURT by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book Settle the Score by Karen E. Quinones Miller
Cover of the book The New Manhood by Karen E. Quinones Miller
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy