Pink by Marilynn Griffith


Pink (Shades of Style) (Paperback)
by Marilynn Griffith

Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Revell (February 1, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0800730402
ISBN-13: 978-0800730406

From Amazon.com
Book Description
Meet Raya Joseph, the creative head designer at an up-and-coming new fashion design firm. Like employees of any fledgling company, Raya and her fellow designers face a variety of challenges–especially when it comes to bringing in business. So when they are hired to design a million-dollar wedding gown, these talented and animated designers are thrilled. But there’s one catch. The new customer is the woman who stole Raya’s fianc. Meanwhile, Flex Dunham, an athletic trainer who coaches a charity basketball team, needs team uniforms and soon finds himself in Raya’s shop. Raya hasn’t looked at a man since her engagement fiasco, so when Flex walks into her office, things get a little complicated. The entertaining first novel in the Shades of Style series, Pink offers a perfect mix of likeable characters, sweet drama, humor, and a little bit of romance.

I enjoyed reading this book, and I also loved the way the author made the reader aware about how AIDS really affects our lives. AIDS/HIV is something that I don’t really read much about in Christian fiction.

Raya is hurting. She’s been jilted by her ex-fiancé and she’s also estranged from her wealthy parents. As she desperately tries to make a living as a fashion designer, her friend, Chenille, introduces her to Flex: a personal trainer and a Christian man. The sexual tension between this couple is very strong, and Flex has issues of his own that he’s dealing with. Also estranged from his wealthy parent, both Flex and Raya are trying to make a living on their own, without using the vast wealth of their fathers.

Raya and Flex’s love grows during her early morning training sessions at the gym, and while she assists Flex with coaching his boy’s basketball team. Raya joyously spends time with the young men and especially connects with Jay, an AIDS orphan. As the story unfolds, you’ll find that Flex and Raya are connected in a very unique, surprising, and God-filled way!

Here’s something I never do when I talk about a book. I’m going to quote a couple of sentences from the book that I loved! I guess I loved these sentences because I love sweets so much? I’m not sure, but I love the way the author described this sunset.

From page 254:
The sun dipped below the horizon like a lemon cookie in a bowl of rainbow sherbet. Hues of melon and pink spread across the sky as though God was painting by number.

Those sentences were amazingly tasty and picturesque! I wanted to eat the sun!

Also, if you recall, I blogged about Cami Tang’s book awhile back. I’d mentioned that was the only Christian fiction novel I’d read with Asian characters.

Well, book two in the Shades Of Style series, Jade, has Asian characters.

Which brings me to another topic, people of different nationalities writing about different races. Marilynn is African-American and her second Shades Of Style book has Asian characters. As a matter of fact, each book focuses on a person of a different race:

I remember Marilynn spoke briefly about this at the ACFW 2006 conference in Dallas. It was an interesting discussion. I think it would be hard for me to write an entire novel where the main characters are Asian. I’m not sure if I could portray him/her authentically. However, I’m pretty sure I could pen a novel with Caucasian characters fairly easily. If anybody has read any of the books in the Shades Of Style series, I’d be interested in hearing your thoughts about them. I enjoyed the first one, and I’ll probably be reading the others sometime in the future.

Cecelia Dowdy

5 thoughts on “Pink by Marilynn Griffith

  1. BarbC

    Pink sounds good… in fact that whole series sounds good. I have never even seen them. I will definitely be on the lookout for them.

    Barb C

    Reply
  2. upwords

    Cecelia,

    Thanks for reading PINK. I appreciate it. Thanks for your discussion about writing multicultural characters as well. Maybe I’ll point some of my readers over here to see what they think. (Do I really want to know? LOL)

    Reply
  3. ragamuffin diva

    Mary did an excellent job in this series! The characters were just girlfriends. They all had their own subtleties, but in the end the love between them all is what you love about the series.

    We’re all just human. We have our own individual and cultural experiences, but in the end we’re all flesh and blood and soul.

    All of us have soul. That’s what Mary tapped into with the Shades of Style series.

    Thanks for featuring her. All her books are amazing!

    Reply
  4. Patricia W.

    I read Turquoise and enjoyed it. I think Marilynn, who is a gifted author, could write this series because she gets and is able to convey the human experience. As for the distinctions between cultures, that’s called research. I would anticipate that any author who wanted to write about another culture and have it come across in an authentic manner would invest in good solid research, including talking to and experiencing life through the eyes of people of that other culture.

    Reply
  5. Karen H.

    I read all the books in the Shades of Style series. They were all excellent!

    I’ll admit that as an African-American I was reluctant to read books 2-4. It’s not that I thought she couldn’t pull it off. (Honestly, that thought never came to my mind.) My reluctance was wondering what I could find interesting in the story of an Asian woman. How could Jade’s Christian walk be anything like mine?

    I read it because I enjoyed Pink so much and it put those thoughts to shame. Although I believe that people are people, no matter what their race, I evidently didn’t know that I believed that Christians were different. It made me realize that Christians are Christians too. We all have the same struggles and insecurities.

    Jade was a great book and I couldn’t wait to read Tangerine and Turquoise. I have to say that Turquoise was my favorite.

    Reply

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