Stella Payne is forty-two, divorced, a high-powered investment analyst, mother of eleven-year-old Quincy- and she does it all. In fact, if she doesn't do it, it doesn't get done, from Little League carpool duty to analyzing portfolios to folding the laundry and bringing home the bacon. She does it all well, too, if her chic house, personal trainer, BMW, and her loving son are any indication. So what if there's been no one to share her bed with lately, let alone rock her world? Stella doesn't mind it too much; she probably wouldn't have the energy for love--and all of love's nasty fallout--anyway.
But when Stella takes a spur-of-the-moment vacation to Jamaica, her world gets rocked to the core--not just by the relaxing effects of the sun and sea and an island full of attractive men, but by one man in particular. He's tall, lean, soft-spoken, Jamaican, smells of citrus and the ocean--and is half her age. The tropics have cast their spell and Stella soon realizes she has come to a cataclysmic juncture: not only must she confront her hopes and fears about love, she must question all of her expectations, passions, and ideas about life and the way she has lived it.
We read a book in one hour. Podcast by @astnhnnh @spiderburger and @fusstache ☎️ 567-309-0357
This week we're reading "Namaste with Sasquatch" by Virginia Wade. This book is kind of like "How Stella Got Her Groove Back" except instead of a hot young Jamaican guy, Stella hooks up with Bigfoot instead. Hey, whatever works! https://t.co/5sr85NgYfw
PhD Candidate in Global Studies. Researches sustainable development + ecotourism in Dominica🇩🇲 Tweets on geopolitics + Marxism. Caribbean alt: @Liberation_Blk
There’s a book on this called “Pursuit of Happiness: Black Women, Diasporic Dreams, and Politics of Emotional Transnationalism” but I wasn’t much a fan. Its conclusions were basically: experiencing racism in the US & the influence of the movie How Stella Got Her Groove Back🫤 lol https://twitter.com/christina_ivey/status/1518613840442888193
"The novel sparkles."--Chicago Sun-Times
"A riotous, sexy book...told in the inimitable voice of Stella, who will charm the reader from the first page....Fans and first-time readers will be hooked."--Richmond Times Dispatch
"A confessional, sister-can-you-understand-this open diary...I laughed out loud."--Boston Globe
"Terry McMillan is the only novelist I have ever read...who makes me glad to be a woman."--Washington Post Book World
"A sexy handbook of self-realization."--The New Yorker
"A liberating love story...[which] tells women it's okay to let go, follow your heart, take a chance, and fall in love, even if that love comes from a place you'd least expect."--Orlando Sentinel
"A sexy...chatty, dishy, you-go!-girl tale that I read in one night."--Entertainment Weekly
"Hot summer fun, girlfriend...The tell-it-like-it-is voice that McMillan honed to smart-mouthed perfection...she resurrects here in the person of Stella Payne."--Indianapolis Star
"A cast of likable characters, funny lines, smart repartee and a warm and fuzzy ending...an irreverent, mischievous, diverting novel that at times will make you laugh out loud." --The New York Times Book Review
"Rich in detail...leaves you feeling like you've just had a good gossip with your best girlfriend."
--Mademoiselle
"A down-and-dirty, romantic and brave story told to you by this smart, good-hearted woman as if she were your best friend."--Newsday