The Flamboyant: A Novel
In the tradition of Beryl Markham's West with the Night, The Flamboyant tells the story of Lenora Demarest, a strong–willed, soft–spoken American beauty intent on becoming the first aviatrix in her adopted country of Puerto Rico.

Born in 1900, on the cusp of divergent eras, Lenora epitomises the glamorous, wealthy, adventurous women of the 1920s and 1930s who balanced romantic, Victorian sensibilities with decidedly modern forays into traditionally male arenas. When an affair with a dashing aviator and friendship with the spirited Amelia Earhart awaken her passion for flying, Lenora – captivated by two cultures and loved by two men – finds herself on an exhilarating path towards independence. Set against the vibrant backdrop of colonial politics, The Flamboyant pays tribute to a woman generations ahead of her time.

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The Flamboyant: A Novel
In the tradition of Beryl Markham's West with the Night, The Flamboyant tells the story of Lenora Demarest, a strong–willed, soft–spoken American beauty intent on becoming the first aviatrix in her adopted country of Puerto Rico.

Born in 1900, on the cusp of divergent eras, Lenora epitomises the glamorous, wealthy, adventurous women of the 1920s and 1930s who balanced romantic, Victorian sensibilities with decidedly modern forays into traditionally male arenas. When an affair with a dashing aviator and friendship with the spirited Amelia Earhart awaken her passion for flying, Lenora – captivated by two cultures and loved by two men – finds herself on an exhilarating path towards independence. Set against the vibrant backdrop of colonial politics, The Flamboyant pays tribute to a woman generations ahead of her time.

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The Flamboyant: A Novel

The Flamboyant: A Novel

by Lori Marie Carlson
The Flamboyant: A Novel

The Flamboyant: A Novel

by Lori Marie Carlson

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Overview

In the tradition of Beryl Markham's West with the Night, The Flamboyant tells the story of Lenora Demarest, a strong–willed, soft–spoken American beauty intent on becoming the first aviatrix in her adopted country of Puerto Rico.

Born in 1900, on the cusp of divergent eras, Lenora epitomises the glamorous, wealthy, adventurous women of the 1920s and 1930s who balanced romantic, Victorian sensibilities with decidedly modern forays into traditionally male arenas. When an affair with a dashing aviator and friendship with the spirited Amelia Earhart awaken her passion for flying, Lenora – captivated by two cultures and loved by two men – finds herself on an exhilarating path towards independence. Set against the vibrant backdrop of colonial politics, The Flamboyant pays tribute to a woman generations ahead of her time.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780060935603
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 10/07/2003
Series: Harper Perennial
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Lori Marie Carlson was born in Jamestown, New York. She holds an M.A. in Hispanic Literature from Indiana University and has taught at several universities. Carlson is also the author of seven books for young adults, including the acclaimed Cool Salsa. The Sunday Tertulia is her first novel. She lives in New York City.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

Sixteen Hundred Acres

Until her mother's sudden death from pneumonia in the spring of 1916, the notion of upheaval in the thrum of daily life had seemed an impossibility. Until the awful moment when her mother had taken leave of the world, Lenora had not imagined that reality could change so quickly. And she would never -- not even with the passing of many years -- understand why God, "in all his infinite wisdom" had decided to take her beloved mother away from her on such an ordinary, unprepossessing afternoon in April.

The idea of actually moving away from Driftwood and Chautauqua County to live on a remote island in the Caribbean had seemed just as unlikely to Lenora as moving to the Timbuktu of her storybooks. And although she did have recollections of her parents discussing a sight-seeing trip to Puerto Rico once, she never could have envisioned that one day she would be going with her father alone, to start a new life there.

Later, Lenora remembered that the summer they had moved to the lake, a visitor to Driftwood -- a politician from the state of Maryland and loyal supporter of President Wilson -- had enthusiastically encouraged Henry and Louise to consider the purchase of Puerto Rican real estate a most prudent investment. "Porto Rico" was, in the congressman's estimation, "a fertile land with splendid products waiting to be marketed to our shores, no customs duty whatsoever, a windfall for the country. One positive outcome of the Spanish-American War and the Treaty of Paris. Fortunes to be made there."

When Lenora, who had been present during that conversation, had asked the congressman why such a war had begunin the first place, he had responded by saying, "Well, my dear, the Spanish-American battle was about our nation coming to the rescue of true patriots. We fought against the tyranny of Spain in our part of the world, in the Americas, more precisely." Demarest, wearing his reading spectacles, had shared a knowing glance with her, as if to say, Daughter, let us talk about this later.

Actually, he had spoken often of the nature of combat to his precocious girl. The well-reported devastations in Europe, the Battle of the Marne, Ypres, the constant news of young boys her age dying, had distressed his child, causing her fitful sleep on many nights. He dearly wished to impart to Lenora a perspective of the world that might help her comprehend the motives for men's violent ways.

And, so, that balmy evening in July, after the Marylander had left their home, Demarest sought to expand upon his views. He explained that there had been, quite naturally, distinct and divergent camps of thought on the matter of '98: the Spanish and the American. Furthermore, within the United States itself, there had been opposing factions tearing at the nation's conscience: those who favored expansionism and those who were stridently against it -- the anti-imperialists, as they called themselves. And while Demarest considered himself to be a citizen of unquestionable patriotism and had been a supporter of the separatist campaign in Cuba -- "those Spaniards are enslaving those unfortunate people; let them have their freedom!" -- he nevertheless tried to take a dispassionate approach in analyzing the incident that was largely responsible for sparking that war. The sinking of the second-class battleship U.S.S. Maine on February 15, 1898, in the harbor of Havana, Cuba, during a particularly tense time in Spain-U.S. diplomacy.

"The Spaniards," he began, "believe that something happened in the coal storage, a kind of combustion, and that it led to the ship's destruction. They deny any aggression whatsoever toward our country. And the United States, well, it has been put forth by our papers and members of the President's cabinet and, I might add, not unconvincingly, that the Spaniards used some kind of explosive device to destroy our country's ship. They did not want the United States to aid the Cuban freedom fighters. But, in truth, only time will tell. Most likely, the veracity of such assertions will not be known for years to come."

The death of his adorable, beautiful Louise, his "dove," his "honey bud," had shaken Demarest to depths he hadn't known existed in his being. Suddenly, what had always seemed so glorious to him about Chautauqua County -- the dense and resinous pine and fir woods, the steely, cirrus-cloud broken sky, the changing of the seasons -- red brushed autumn, followed by the silent snows of winter, fresh spring, and mild summer -- was unbearable.

He knew that he would never part with Driftwood, he would keep the property for his daughter's sake; yet, he craved to get away from the house and all its memories of promise.

It seemed to Lenora that in a matter of days, gray days marked by cold rain and miserable November dampness, her father had made up his mind about something that he, initially, had confined to the realm of fantasy: buying an estate of sixteen hundred acres in the Caribbean.

He had been perusing the evening papers and had happened upon a notice of sale in The Herald. After reading and rereading the appealing description, he concluded that Puerto Rico might be just the place to start anew. He could try his hand at farming; something he had secretly wished to do for years. And, so, Demarest directed his lawyer to make the necessary arrangements for purchase, and in the course of two weeks, became the owner of prime real estate in the little town of Dorado, twenty miles west of the capital, along the island's northern coast.

Being an only child and a fairly solitary girl who had preferred the company of books to other children, Lenora wasn't particularly against the idea of moving to a foreign land; especially a perpetually sunny one that seemed so colorful, imbued with every shade of green and blue. Her father had given her a clipping of the article that had caught his eye: "Porto Rico's ocean temperature is as warm as August rain, the sand as white as sugar. The breezes always kind." The idea of moving to a place so far away, surrounded by the endless sea, seemed adventurous, even a fun thing to do.

But Chautauqua County, her birthplace and the birthplace of her parents, and Driftwood, in particular -- where her mother had found a perfectly congenial ambience -- would be a place apart, a setting of commemoration. She would return, she vowed, as often as she could.

The Flamboyant. Copyright © by Lori Carlson. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Reading Group Guide

An Introduction to The Flamboyant

Set in the 1920s and 1930s, The Flamboyant tells the life story of Lenora Demarest, an American beauty intent on achieving fulfillment as the first aviatrix in her adopted country of Puerto Rico. Born in 1900, on the cusp of sweeping change in American society, Lenora grows up in a quaint lakeside village in western New York State in the company of her adoring parents and their intellectual friends. After her mother's untimely death, she accompanies her grief-stricken father, Dr. Henry Demarest, to a lush hacienda on the northern coast of Puerto Rico. Over the next decade, they turn their tropical estate, La Sardinera, into a successful grapefruit plantation, and Henry remarries Milady, a native Puerto Rican from a neighboring village.

Meanwhile, Lenora is courted by a dashing American aviator who awakens in her a passion for flying, and a gentle, wealthy Puerto Rican entrepreneur who stops at little to win her affection. In love with both men, Lenora nevertheless confounds her family and friends by her reactions to these very different suitors. She befriends Amelia Earhart and is determined to define her own life not by her status as wife but by her own aspirations.

Inspired by the life of a historical figure, and set against the vibrant backdrop of colonial politics, The Flamboyant traces the inner life of a quintessential modern woman -- spirited and determined to live out her dreams. In language that captures the great natural splendor of rural New York as well as the Caribbean, it also evokes, in exhilarating colors, the magic of early aviation and pays tribute to an American heroine ahead of hertime.

Discussion Questions

  1. What tragic event prompts Lenora Demarest's move from Chautauqua County to Puerto Rico? Who accompanies her? Who is George Hanson, and where does Lenora Demarest first meet him? What excitement does he communicate to her at that time?

  2. Who is Ignacio Portelli? What brings about his initial visit to their plantation, La Sardinera? How does he feel about Lenora? What extravagant gift does he give her shortly after meeting her?

  3. Who is Milady García? What conditions bring her from her home in Mayagüez to the Demarests? How does her role at the plantation change over the course of The Flamboyant?

  4. What did you think of the portrayals of the Demarests and their workers? How would you characterize their treatment of their employees? What are some of the ways in which they support the locals in their region, and the workers on their farm?

  5. What stimulates Lenora's interest in jewelry? What decision does she make about her own collection? How does she educate herself about jewelry? Did any of her descriptions of jewels intrigue you?

  6. When George Hanson takes Lenora up in a plane for the first time, how does she react? How does George encourage Lenora to pursue aviation? What role does he play in her instruction?

  7. How do Henry Demarest and Milady García reveal their engagement to Lenora? Does she suspect their relationship? How does she feel about her father's remarriage? Do those feelings undergo any change as the date of the wedding approaches?

  8. Who is Janet Rowan? How does she factor into Lenora's experience of flying? How does Lenora come to know Amelia Earhart? What shared struggle defines their connection? How does Earhart feel about the institution of marriage? Compare and contrast Earhart's views with Lenora's feelings about becoming a wife.

  9. What is the name of Lenora's first plane? What does the previous owner try to get Lenora to promise? How does she feel when she flies? Would you characterize her feelings about flying as more powerful than her feelings for George and Ignacio?

  10. How did you interpret the afterword of the book? Were you surprised by the trajectory of Lenora's life? What aspects of her life did you find especially intriguing? How would you describe her character?

About Lori Marie Carlson

Lori Marie Carlson was born and raised in Jamestown, New York, in Chautauqua County. She has an extensive background in Latin American literature and has taught Spanish and translation at several universities. Carlson is also the author of seven books for young adults, including the acclaimed Cool Salsa. She lives in New York City.

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