"This is one of Barbara Delinsky's finest books"
He dotes on his wife while she adores her husband. Both
Hugh and Dana Clarke are eagerly awaiting the birth of
their first child but when Lizzie is born, both parents
are shocked to see she has Afro-American features
including skin color and hair. The Clarke family came
over on the Mayflower and the patriarch is a rich
published author who lives in a wealthy neighborhood whose
residents are old money. When they come to the hospital
to see their grandchild, Hugh's father becomes furious,
claiming his daughter-in-law had an affair with a black
man or if not she has black blood in her ancestry. Other relatives and friends comment on Lizzie's features
and Hugh asks for a paternity test in the hope that it
will shut people up. Dana is heartbroken that her husband
made such a request and a schism in their loving marriage
opens. Hugh needs to know what relatives in Dana's family
are black and the only person it could be is her unknown
father. Yet when they confront him, he provides positive
proof that there is no African blood in his family. Dana
doesn't care because she thinks how Lizzie looks is
insignificant but Hugh pursues the subject and ends up
shocked at what he learns. This is one of Barbara Delinsky's finest books because she
raises interesting social issues and leaves it to the
reader to form their own opinions. Hugh is not a bad man
but is a product of his blue blood upraising. He loves
his wife and daughter very much and is shocked at himself
when he sees things differently because his daughter is
not totally a Caucasian. Dana feels that a DNA test was
irrelevant and loves her daughter just as she is and hopes
Hugh can do the same. The protagonists are great
characters because they are not saints but people who are
products of their environments. FAMILY TREE IS a
heartwarming family drama. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted February 25, 2007
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