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Anonymous
Posted July 8, 2006
Genuine, Raw Account of Immigrant Life in America
Like many other reviewers, I was required to read this book for a history class I attended. I was really wary of reading this particular book at first, as most of my professors had a tendency of doling out lengthy, technical biographies or novels with hard to grasp plot-lines. What I liked most about this novel was the genuine feel to it, as though I was hearing this story from the actual characters in the book. I enjoyed the sharp tales of poverty and horrifying conditions of the mills--it was something I had not honestly been exposed to in such detail before. In my opinion, this is the best book for one to understand what it was like for an immigrant coming to America, looking for a better life, hands down.
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Anonymous
Posted May 19, 2004
Wow, I didn't expect this!
I read this book for my history class. As a history major, I love it when my professors assign books that their students will love. From the moment I started the book until the very end, I was so amazed and yet, appalled at the same time. It took this book for me to realize how hard it is to come from another country to America and make it. I thought this book showed the beginnings of the Progressive Reform Movement at its finest. Thank you for writing such a great book!! :)
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Anonymous
Posted July 24, 2003
Around the kitchen table
Reading oput of the Furnace was like sitting at the kitchen table late at night listening to my parents and grandparents talk about how it was when they 'came over'! What memories this book brought back! I would recommend it for anyone who had relatives that worked in the coal mines and steel mills of the early 1900's in whatever area of the country! What a great appreciation it will give you for what your forebears went through when they decided to come to America.
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Anonymous
Posted February 10, 2002
Personal History
When I found out I had to read this book for a paper at school, I groaned. But, while reading this book, I kept thinking about my grandmother telling me her stories of her family, and how they started over in this country. I loved the book because it gave an outstanding look at the lives of the immigrants and the way they were treated and how we thought about of them, and the way we treated them. I think anyone who loves to read or learn about their family history will love this book.
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Anonymous
Posted January 7, 2001
Braddock, Pennsylvania
This book is a must for anyone who grew up in the steel mill town of Braddock Penna. or that area. My parents migrated here from the old country about 1927.Many places in that area are mentioned in the book. Braddock is still there, but everything is gone.All the stores and bars along Braddock avenue are either gone or boarded up.The mill still is open but not to the capacity of years ago.
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Anonymous
Posted November 18, 2000
Stories of My Grandfather From My Childhood.
This book has brought back many memories of my grandfather who came to Pittsburg via Nova Scotia and Tuxedo Park New York where my father was born. He too came to this country alone while my grandmother was in Slovakia with my two aunts and one uncle. Her came here around 1885 and got his first job in the steemills in the early 1900's. The book did a marvelouse job of returning some of my fondest memories of the talks I've had with my father about grandfather.
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Anonymous
Posted October 19, 2000
A Must Read - History Buff or Not
Bell's book is an informative and interesting read. It is a novel chronicling three generations of a Slavic immagrant family who work in the Philadelphia mines. While it is a fictional book, its setting is historically accurate and descript. It reads like a novel, and is very insightful into the human condition that was endured by these important people in America's History.
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Anonymous
Posted March 31, 2000
Family History
T.Bell's book reflects a previous generation's aspirations and values which have been incorporated into present day culture , sometimes without deciding whether or not we should actually live this way. Our greatgrandfathers needed to work such long hours , but Bell explains why. Black Susan , the Hornyaks , and other characters within the book are based on real people in Braddock PA and part of my oral tradition as a Hornyak descendant. It must be noted , however, that Hornyak is a very common Hungarian Slovak name and the situations that the emigrants find themselves in are universal. The book isn't a cultural lexicon which explains the European culture from which these people approach the new. It does explain them in their present. The style isn't that of a fast paced Tom Clacy action thriller, but is fine for someone to reach back and sit with New Americans , their Roots, and feel some of the feelings of people living in a new world of new possiblities in a baffling culture.
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Anonymous
Posted July 13, 2009
No text was provided for this review.