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Laddar... Charity Girl (2008)av Michael Lowenthal
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Adult fiction/historical fiction. I'm not motivated enough to finish this now, but may try again if I find more time later--maybe. First 54 pages were plodding, felt oppressive--not that enjoyable, really. Maybe the 1910s are just not my favorite historical period to be reading? ( ) The protagonist of Michael Lowenthal’s engaging novel Charity Girl is one of the 50,000 women spuriously imprisoned by the U.S. Government during WWI. This sounds like a dull premise, but what bubbles up through the setup is a spirited, sexy romp through a Boston in the grip of war fever. Frieda Mintz, a 17-year-old Jewish shopgirl, likes fast cars, handsome young officers, dances, drinking, and the Red Sox; her resistance to parental authority and independent spirit mark her as something of a proto-feminist. The details of her arrest and exile to a women’s labor house have obvious parallels to the suspension of civil rights post-9/11, but Lowenthal wisely chooses not to force a political message onto his narrative. The period setting is vividly rendered without the overabundance of superfluous detail that makes so much historical fiction headache-inducing. What stays with the reader from Charity Girl is Frieda Mintz and her thirst for life. From THE L MAGAZINE, January 17 2007 This horrifying look at a forgotten (purposely, I suspect) part of American history is also a surprising showcase for the author's ability to capture the little things that make up joy, and even pass on that feeling to the reader. Unfortunately, the story falls apart right at the climax, leaving its heroine in a pickle and then skipping ahead without ever explaining how on earth she got out of it. This omission cheats the reader out of both the emotions that this scene should have inspired and an understanding of the next steps in the process that these women went through. If the ending had been better handled this would have been a 5 star book but as it is I feel that 4 is a bit generous. 3 1/2 stars Frieda Mintz is a seventeen year old Jewish girl who works as a bundle wrapper in a department store after running away from her controlling mother, who wanted to marry her off to a much older man. Frieda is barely scraping by, but she's enjoying her life, which becomes even more exciting when she meets Felix Morse, a private in the Army, during a parade. They have one date, in which Felix takes her to a baseball game and, later, changes Frieda's life forever by giving her a sexually transmitted disease. Frieda's life quickly takes a turn for the worse - she loses her job and is unable to find a new one without a letter of reference from her former employer, she goes through the meager amount of money she's managed to save, she loses all of her "friends" (save one) at the department store, is nearly raped, and is eventually picked up and sent to a home for women who are infected with STDs. I have a lot of thoughts about this book, so my review might seem a little disjointed. First, I've had this book for something like six or seven years. I bought it shortly after its release (I believe in 2007?) and tried to read it then, but I never got past the first few pages. The author's writing style is a little different, and I just couldn't get into the story on my first try - but on the second try, I was instantly hooked. I liked the character of Frieda, although it was a little hard to sympathize with the "love" that she felt for Felix instantly. Still, I guess I can give her a little leeway because she was rather sheltered growing up, and it was a different era then (filled with the knowledge that soldiers were being shipped overseas and might never return, which might up the quickening of "love"). And she did grow, from being incredibly naive and trusting to someone who sees the world more as it is. I really liked the character of Jo, one of the girls that Frieda meets in the home. And then there's Anna. Sigh. I have conflicted thoughts about Anna. She's one of the overseers of the girls in the home, and at first she seems rather sympathetic toward them. Ultimately, it is Anna who evaluates the girls and gives them the opportunity to either regain their lives or be classified as degenerates. She forms a friendship with Frieda, and that is when the trouble starts. As for the historical context and situations, I found it fascinating. I don't read a lot of fiction set in the First World War era, but this book was interesting to me. The author obviously knows his era and throws in a lot of language, names, brands, and etc that really immersed me into the story and the time period. There is a lot of racism displayed against the Jewish characters (Frieda, Felix, one of the doctors at the home, and all of their families are Jewish), as well as a ton of sexism (not surprising - women don't even have the vote yet at this time). Unfortunately also not surprising, it is the women who are prosecuted, even though in some cases (like Frieda's), they just got involved with the wrong man, who then infected them. Most of the girls in the home just like a good time; only a few seem to be involved with prostitution, and even then, it's the only way that they can really survive at the time. They are being held in the home without charges, without a trial, and without representation, only because they have been found to have a sexually transmitted disease. The ending felt rushed to me, and although Frieda learned some very important things, she was still quite naive. Altogether, I am glad that I read this book (I'm not sure that I can say that I "enjoyed" it, because there is a lot of harshness in it). inga recensioner | lägg till en recension
Fiction.
Literature.
Historical Fiction.
HTML: From the author of The Same Embrace: A "lively and illuminating" novel that explores a little-known chapter of World War I history (The Washington Post Book World). Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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Google Books — Laddar... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation enligt LCBetygMedelbetyg:
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