At the same time that other white members of her Junior League are building separate bathrooms in the carport for the colored help to use so they don't pick up any "Nigra diseases," Miss Skeeter is a white woman who finds herself asking questions about why the black men and women of Jackson are treated they way they are and why they have to continue to just accept it as the norm. She begins on a quest to share the stories of "the help," the hired maids of Jackson, through a series of interviews with women. You will find yourself cheering for your three champions and relishing in their victories over their "white women" and crying at their defeats, fears, and tragedies.
The Help discusses common human decency and the question of why we treat one another the way we do, whether it is based on the color of our skin, the money in our bank account, the level of our education, or the brand name on our clothes. The question the author raises is if we have, in fact, moved beyond the days of Jackson in the 1960s or if the same prejudices continue under another name. Great book!
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Excellent review. I soloved this book!Powerful--so well done
ReplyDeleteI was spellbound by the story, by the new world I was allowed to enter and the characters who I learned to care deeply for. This is a book that someone recommended to me and I'm so glad they did. Now I'm going to do the same for all my friends. Bravo Kathryn! If this is your debut novel, I wish you a long and fruitful writing career, and I'm going to buy every one of your books.
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