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Friday, July 30, 2010

Fiction Addict

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The Help by Kathryn Stockett

Posted by Marianne Peters On March - 8 - 2010

Genre: Historical Fiction

Publisher: Putnam

Publication Date: February 2009

Reviewed by Marianne Peters

The Help, Kathryn Stockett’s first novel, is compelling, poignant, funny, and suspenseful – in short, impossible to put down. Ask me – I tried!

In 1962, Jackson, Mississippi’s rigid society is defined by Jim Crow laws that keep blacks and whites separate. But those laws are losing their hold thanks to the growing Civil Rights movement, and during this turbulent time, Stockett’s characters begin to question the rules they have taken for granted their whole lives.

Three voices narrate the novel. Dignified Aibileen and sassy Minnie have been serving as maids in white households for years. When Skeeter Phelan, a wealthy college graduate, asks them to help her write a book about their experiences, they are both reticent. As domestics, they are good at being invisible, keeping their mouths shut and absorbing the constant indignities of racism. However, telling their stories allows them to tell the truth about their lives for the first time – a truth that their white employers would rather not acknowledge.

Skeeter is as trapped as the black domestics she interviews. Squeezed into her family and society’s expectations of a Southern woman, she is yearning to write, not just decorate a husband’s arm. She’s also missing her own maid and confidante, Constantine, who has mysteriously disappeared while she was away at school.

Stockett’s skillful writing allows us into the minds and hearts of these three women, who are risking their reputations, their livelihood – perhaps even their lives – to share their stories. Through them we see that despite the boundaries between the races, a deep interdependence existed between blacks and whites. Skeeter’s truest friend was her black maid. Minnie’s white employer sees past her sharp tongue to her kind heart. And Aibileen, raising her seventeenth white child, reminds the girl of her worth and whispers stories in her ear about brave black people occupying the Woolworth’s counter. True, whites needed the labor, blacks needed employment. Stockett reminds us, though, that women will always need other women, and friendship knows no boundaries.

Review copy provided by Putnam.

1 Response

  1. Meg Said,

    I think this review really brings out the inner self of Kathryn Stockett.

    Posted on April 25th, 2010 at 12:14 pm

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