Finished "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett, end of January. Hooray, I read three books in January, not as many as my cousin Carol, but now I am back to speed! I recommend it as a different read. I enjoyed this book which takes place in during the Civil Rights movement in the south. Serendipity occurs as we reading this during Martin Luther King celebrations and into black history month. The novel is primarily told through the dialect of great characters, black maids, who make their living serving the white southern women. I got a bit tired of some of the dialect, but I have known people who talk this way and so it reminded me of them. This is a good first novel for the author. I would have waited to buy this in paperback, but our book club was into it and so once again I did what I said I would not do, bought another book! And a hardback too! Well I am glad I did read this best seller while it is there on the top of the charts. Outspoken, brazen Minny is my favorite maid followed by Abiliene who is the true heroine. Skeeter is the white gal, primary character returned home, trying to break into writing to make a living, who pulls this novel together. I was sad at the ending, which was not a lives happily ever after, so in that regard it matches life. It is worth reading..Perhaps because I have known and am/have been a close friend with many blacks "The Help" resonated with me. It reminded me of old Daisy from Kinloch; she was from the south and I expect had many of these same experiences. She was a friend of my grandmother's and when I came into the kitchen where they were talking it became very quiet. Wish I could have heard Daisy's tales.
Listen to what Abilene says about prayer "'cause that's the way prayer do. It's like electricity. It keeps things going..." Abilene writes her prayers daily in a small notebook. She is someone everyone seeks out to pray for them, because her prayers have power. In this way, she reminds me of my friend, Rita. Her friends say, "We all on a party line to God, but you setting right in his ear."
If you know the black southern dialect or the dialect of the working people, you will enjoy the descriptives. Abiliene describes some words of one upmanship from her son Treelore, who is killed by whites robbing her of her dreams. "I give him a real simple word and he got to come up with a fancy one like it. I say house cat and he say domesticized feline. I say mixer and he say motorized rotunda. One day I say Crisco. He scratch his head. He just can't believe I done won the game with something as simple as Crisco. Came to be a secret joke with us, meaning, something you can't dress up no matter how you try...."
The villain of the novel is Miss Hilly, the white woman who fancies herself superior to everyone. We see this with her treatment of Skeeter one of her long time friends. It takes a Minny to overcome her long reach, but not before she tries to destroy Minnie too.
After reading this I have pulled my old copy of To Kill a Mockingbird from my shelf. I am now rereading it and enjoying the writing.
I created this blog to record our RV trips and ;morphed into life in our retirement lane and telling my tales of life. Now my tales of life are on widowhood, my new and probably my last phase of l I have migrated to Facebook where I communicate daily, instantly with family/friends all over. I write here sometimes. COPYWRIGHT NOTICE: All photos, stories, writings on this blog are the property of myself, Patricia Morrison and may not be used, copied, without my permission most often freely given.
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Blogger insists on showing my posts and comments to others as my Books Blog, You can click on it to get here and vice versa....the Book blog is just that while this one, my first, original has miscellany
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Showing posts with label The Help. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Help. Show all posts
Monday, February 1, 2010
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