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Four peerless actors render an array of sharply defined black and white characters in the nascent years of the civil rights movement. They each handle a variety of Southern accents with aplomb and draw out the daily humiliation and pain the maids are subject to, as well as their abiding affection for their white charges. The actors handle the narration and dialogue so well that no character is ever stereotyped, the humor is always delightful, and the listener is led through the multilayered stories of maids and mistresses. The novel is a superb intertwining of personal and political history in Jackson, Miss., in the early 1960s, but this reading gives it a deeper and fuller power. A Putnam hardcover (Reviews, Dec. 1). (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.At eight o'clock that same night, I'm stumbling down Aibileen's street as discreetly as one can carrying a fifty-pound Corona typewriter. I knock softly, already dying for another cigarette to calm my nerves. Aibileen answers and I slip inside. She's wearing the same green dress and stiff black shoes as last time.
I try to smile, like I'm confident it will work this time, despite the idea she explained over the phone. "Could we…sit in the kitchen this time?" I ask. "Would you mind?"
"Alright. Ain't nothing to look at, but come on back."
The kitchen is about half the size of the living room and warmer. It smells like tea and lemons. The black-and-white linoleum floor has been scrubbed thin. There's just enough counter for the china tea set.
I set the typewriter on a scratched red table under the window. Aibileen starts to pour the hot water into the teapot.
"Oh, none for me, thanks," I say and reach in my bag. "I brought us some Co-Colas if you want one." I've tried to come up with ways to make Aibileen more comfortable. Number One: Don't make Aibileen feel like she has to serve me.
"Well, ain't that nice. I usually don't take my tea till later anyway." She brings over an opener and two glasses. I drink mine straight from the bottle and seeing this, she pushes the glasses aside, does the same.
I called Aibileen after Elizabeth gave me the note, and listened hopefully, as Aibileen told me her idea-for her to write her own words down and then show me what she's written. I tried to act excited. But I know I'll have to rewrite everything she's written, wasting even more time. I thought it might make it easier if she could see it in type-face instead of me reading it and telling her it can't work this way.
We smile at each other. I take a sip of my Coke, smooth my blouse. "So…" I say. Aibileen has a wire-ringed notebook in front of her. "Want me to… just go head and read?"
"Sure," I say.
We both take deep breaths and she begins reading in a slow, steady voice.
"My first white baby to ever look after was named Alton Carrington Speers. It was 1924 and I'd just turned fifteen years old. Alton was a long, skinny baby with hair fine as silk on a corn…"
I begin typing as she reads, her words rhythmic, pronounced more clearly than her usual talk. "Every window in that filthy house was painted shut on the inside, even though the house was big with a wide green lawn. I knew the air was bad, felt sick myself…"
"Hang on," I say. I've typed wide greem. I blow on the typing fluid, retype it. "Okay, go ahead."
"When the mama died, six months later," she reads, "of the lung disease, they kept me on to raise Alton until they moved away to Memphis. I loved that baby and he loved me and that's when I knew I was good at making children feel proud of themselves…"
I hadn't wanted to insult Aibileen when she told me her idea. I tried to urge her out of it, over the phone. "Writing isn't that easy. And you wouldn't have time for this anyway, Aibileen, not with a full-time job."
"Can't be much different than writing my prayers every night."
It was the first interesting thing she'd told me about herself since we'd started the project, so I'd grabbed the shopping pad in the pantry. "You don't say your prayers, then?"
"I never told nobody that before. Not even Minny. Find I can get my point across a lot better writing em down."
"So this is what you do on the weekends?" I asked. "In your spare time?" I liked the idea of capturing her life outside of work, when she wasn't under the eye of Elizabeth Leefolt.
"Oh no, I write a hour, sometimes two ever day. Lot a ailing, sick peoples in this town."
I was impressed. That was more than I wrote on some days. I told her we'd try it just to get the project going again.
Aibileen takes a breath, a swallow of Coke, and reads on.
She backtracks to her first job at thirteen, cleaning the Francis the First silver service at the governor's mansion. She reads how on her first morning, she made a mistake on the chart where you filled in the number of pieces so they'd know you hadn't stolen anything.
"I come home that morning, after I been fired, and stood outside my house with my new work shoes on. The shoes my mama paid a month's worth a light bill for. I guess that's when I understood what shame was and the color of it too. Shame ain't black, like dirt, like I always thought it was. Shame be the color of a new white uniform your mother ironed all night to pay for, white without a smudge or a speck a work-dirt on it."
Aibileen looks up to see what I think. I stop typing. I'd expected the stories to be sweet, glossy. I realize I might be getting more than I'd bargained for. She reads on.
"…so I go on and get the chiffarobe straightened out and before I know it, that little white boy done cut his fingers clean off in that window fan I asked her to take out ten times. I never seen that much red come out a person and I grab the boy, I grab them four fingers. Tote him to the colored hospital cause I didn't know where the white one was. But when I got there, a colored man stop me and say, Is this boy white?" The typewriter keys are clacking like hail on a roof. Aibileen is reading faster and I am ignoring my mistakes, stopping her only to put in another page. Every eight seconds, I fling the carriage aside.
"And I say, Yessuh, and he say, Is them his white fingers? And I say, Yessuh, and he say, Well, you better tell em he your high yellow cause that colored doctor won't operate on a white boy in a Negro hospital. And then a white policeman grab me and he say, Now you look a here-"
She stops. Looks up. The clacking ceases.
"What? The policeman said look a here what?"
"Well, that's all I put down. Had to catch the bus for work this morning."
I hit the return and the typewriter dings. Aibileen and I look each other straight in the eye. I think this might actually work.
Have you ever done something in spite of yourself? That is what happened to me when I read The Help by Kathryn Socket. A good friend of mine suggested a few months back that I read the book. When I finally came up on the massive library waiting list, I was ecstatic. As I read the slip cover for a synopsis of the story, I was intrigued and anxious to get started until... I flipped to the back flap and there was a Caucasian woman. I was stunned and almost offended. I distinctly remembered reading just moments before about two of the main characters being African American women, in the tumultuous 1960's and in Jackson, Mississippi no less! How can she [Kathryn Socket], who is not a minority member or even a bi-racial woman, write from the point of view of a black woman? I would soon find out! Against my own judgment I started to read the book and let's just say I read all 440+ pages in a week's time; it would have been sooner if work didn't get in the way! All I can say is BRILLIANT! Stockett depicted the characters so vividly that I almost forgot who had written the book. She seamlessly wove this tale of racial and human relations, with such precision and depth that I would easily read the book again. Believable characters, an exciting and at times suspenseful plot, what more can you ask for? I was fully engaged! I was committed to reading and drawn in almost seductively by the words on the pages! At times, I wanted to cry and other times I laughed out loud. There were times I was literally afraid and others I was so angry, I wished I was part of Civil Rights movement of the 1960's so I could DO something! Aibileen could easily be any one of my aunts, reading her throughout the book made me feel like I was eavesdropping on all the elder women in my family! She is wise, smart, and compassionate despite her circumstances. I found myself labeling random strangers as possible shoe-ins for the book's characters. I found Miss Minnie and Miss Skeeter by day two while sitting in the hairdresser chair! Utilizing fiction, Kathryn Socket was able to allow us a glimpse at a critical time period in American history through the eyes of two different classes of people who experienced it. She offered the ying and the yang, the good and the bad of human relationships amongst racial tension and political turmoil. Sadly, I was disappointed with how the books ended, I craved more information, I wanted to know that all my characters, all the heroines ended up ok. But I suspect Stockett left it that way purposely in order to give way to our own imaginations! If nothing else, this book will educate you and motivate you to learn more. I am pleased, entertained, and I don't even care anymore that the authors is not black! FIVE STARS!
278 out of 298 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 13, 2009
I absolutely LOVED this book. Kathryn Stockett did an amazing job. I loved how the story was written from the perspectives of the different women. I enjoyed seeing the world through their very different eyes and watching them develop throughout the story. The beautifully descriptive writing drew me in and made me feel like I was right there. This is an intense story of how these different women deal with the issue of racism during the civil rights movement. It is a poignant and deeply moving novel. I didn't want the book to end. I think this book would make an amazing movie as well. I would highly recommend this book to everyone.
156 out of 163 people found this review helpful.
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Posted August 23, 2011
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This is one of the best books I have read. It's touching, inspirational and absolutely unforgettable. From the beginning of the book I was drawn in, felt with the characters and learnt from them. Awesome read- that will want you to put this book on your top shelf.
141 out of 141 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 3, 2009
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Kathryn Stockett has written a marvelous book -- the southern voices are right, the stories of the women draw you in with their resourcefulness and courage. Memphis, where I grew up, was where the Delta began, and she described that world perfectly -- the maids in their uniforms, the restrictions, the distrust. I couldn't put it down, but then I was sorry when I finished because I wanted to read more about Skeeter and Minny and all the others. I hope she writes a sequel.
105 out of 114 people found this review helpful.
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Posted June 23, 2011
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This was a fun read. I loved the story. Can only recommend.
95 out of 112 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 3, 2010
I normally read period novels by black authors with the exception of Flannery O'Connor because it is 'my' personal preference but a friend suggested I read "The Help". I could not avoid analyzing the storyline throughout my reading. When I read the initial chapter on Skeeter I immediately concluded this book was about Skeeter, not the "maids", and that in the end, the "maids" would lose their livelihoods because they trusted this white woman which is completely far-fetched, and Skeeter would be revered as someone who played a role in opening the door to civil rights for black domestics in the south. I can say based on actual, spoken accounts from my dear 107-yr old grandmother born in Clarksdale, MS who worked as a domestic in MS from the 1920's until 1960 when she migrated to IL and my dear 108-yr old great-aunt, born in Mt. Olive, MS who worked as a domestic in MS & IL from the 1920s until 1970, that no black woman during that time would have entrusted her fate into the hands of a white person. That is not an opinion, it is truth. Both my grandmother & great-aunt were outstanding women who came from loving families and were very respectable. However, like the Aibileen, Minny, etc., they worked as domestics for upper and lower socioeconomic white families to help provide for their families and were acquainted with many other domestics. They nursed and loved the children of the families they worked for but there was minimal trust or respect for their employers who treated them like the family pet. I am sure some of the stories in this book, fact or fiction, closely resemble experiences for domestics during that time but my personal opinion is the stories are too contrived and merely set the stage for Skeeter's (Kathryn Stockett?) life and her journey to NYC to fulfill her literary ambition and to attract mass readership for Ms. Stockett's novel.
71 out of 281 people found this review helpful.
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Posted November 27, 2009
I squeeze and squeeze this book to my chest as tears pour over the cover. The beauty of the characters, the words seared in my heart, the hate not-so-long-ago leave me limp with empathy, love, sadness and compassion. I want to hug and cry with each and every beautiful woman in this book. I want to rock and love each and every sweet color-blind child. I want the ache in my heart to stop.
54 out of 65 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 18, 2011
I cannot get over this issue with the agency model. The paperback can be purchased at $8.42 but the freaking ebook is $9.99. Crazy. Why did I buy a stupid ereader? Oh, I know....because I was lead to beleive that the ebook prices would be well forth my $300.00.
45 out of 136 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Set in the early sixties in Jackson, Mississippi, The Help is an incredible debut novel told from the point of view of three different narrators: Aibileen, a single black woman in her fifties is a domestic for a young family with one child, Minny is a younger married woman with a houseful of kids, an abusive husband and a very sharp tongue that has lost her many a job. Skeeter Phelan, a white,single recent graduate from Ole Miss still residing with her parents, is the only woman in her sorority sisters' bridge club that has a dream to do something with her life. Skeeter wants to become a writer and manages to interest a publisher in a possible book about black domestics and their relationship to their white employers. In a dichotomous society and a time of increasing racial tensions, this was a dangerous thing to do, both for Skeeter and for the maids. Racing against a seemingly impossible deadline, Skeeter, Aibileen, Minny and 10 other maids manage to secretly write the book that eventually causes a social brouhaha while changing the lives of all involved. Although they had some fears and doubts at times, these courageous women were but a small beginning catalyst in the fight for civil rights.
This book made me run the gamut of emotions; from mad to sad to glad. It made me mad to see how the white women treated the black women as if they were invisible and unfeeling. At one point in the book, Aibileen tells Skeeter that she had commented that black people attend too much church and that comment had stuck with Aibileen. Skeeter wondered what else she had said ,"never suspecting the help was listening or cared". They expected their maids to do all the housework and cooking while paying them next to nothing. It seems ludicrous that while the maids were entrusted with the most important job of virtually raising their employers' children, they were not even allowed to use their employers' bathrooms. It made me sad to see how they were treated as if they had no human feelings at all and how they were supposed to be grateful, never complain or feel any indignity at their treatment. The book also made me glad because Skeeter,one of the kindest of the white women, managed to put one of her own sorority sisters in her place. She also came to understand they were all sisters under the skin and to get an idea of what the domestics had to put up with in their lives. Aibileen tried to give the white children she raised a sense of respect for themselves and other people at the same time that she gave them a lot of love.
Ms. Stockett does a wonderful job giving voice to all her characters bringing them, their surroundings and their feelings so vividly to life. The social tensions of the times are also very well done. I found it extremely easy to visualize every scenario in the book and deeply empathized with the characters. It's heartrending, poignant and uplifting all at the same time. The Help is one book I found really easy to become immersed in and hard to put down. Be sure to read her thoughts after the acknowledgements at the end of the book. This will give you some insight as to who and what influenced her book. Highly recommended.
35 out of 40 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.It's 1962, a time when escalating tensions are rising between African-Americans (then known as "coloreds") and their white employers and neighbors! Told from three different points of view, this story probes the intimate thoughts about what it's like for the maids of wealthy and middle class white people in Jackson, Mississippi. It's more than just hard, hard work; it's trying to survive in a constantly demeaning, life or death survival environment! That may sound trite, but trust this reviewer - these accounts are absolutely riveting, heart-stopping and poignant in ways that put new definitions on these commonly used terms!
A young woman, Miss Skeetter, wants to be a journalist while her family and friends believe that finding a husband is all that matters, no matter what one's educational background is. Her first question that opens the central plot is to ask if one of the maids, Aibleen, wishes things were different.
Aibleen never gets to complete the conversation, but she remembers the comment as she continues to care for three-year-old Mae Mobley. Aibleen, like other hired "help," is more of a mother to Mae Mobley than her own distant, punishing mother by birth. The pain Aibleen feels over this coldness is stunning when one learns the numbing background of her own deep loss. Yet through it all, Aibleen's quietly muttered thoughts and written prayers to God make the reader roar with laughter and ponder what's important in the schemes and nonsense of daily family life. It is she who provides the impetus for Miss Skeeter's project, to get a few black women to talk about the joys, sorrows, challenges and downright insanity of their service employment.
Then you'll meet Minnie, another maid who doesn't keep jobs too long because of her outspoken, funny, but offensively blunt comments to her employers. When that doesn't work, lies will do to get rid of her since she obviously doesn't know her "place" in this cold, tough world! Her challenges include a violent home life and an employer who is from the seedier side of Southern life, what used to be called "white trash." Miss Celia is lonely and constantly striving to fit in, but it's clear she doesn't have a clue about much!
The project begins on a wrong note and seems doomed to die before it gets going, but tragedy will change all that. Then the reader will be just as stunned at the gritty, fiercely determined nature that arises in a dozen women to tell their tale despite what just might be brutally lethal results. They express their fury and their hysterical barbs as well at the turn of a plan by whites to create toilets for the "diseased" help.
So many other characters and events fill these 464 wonderful pages. This reviewer hardly ever says this about any book, but this is a book you will not be able to put down and will be so, so sorry when it's over. It will change hearts and minds wherever it's experienced!
This is Kathryn Stockett's first novel, a brilliant, potent celebration of astonishing and noteworthy hope for light to surmount darkness, be it in a person's color or behavior! The Help is a wonder to behold and cherish!
Reviewed by Viviane Crystal on December 29, 2008
29 out of 36 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 2, 2010
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Set in Mississippi in the 1960's, Stockett captured the personalities of the black maids and Southern Belles so perfectly, it read like a non-fiction biography. What an inspiration to human beings everywhere! The insight into human behavior couldn't have been done better! This book should be mandatory reading in every school curriculum! Touching! Heartfelt! Heartbreaking! Uplifting! Inspiring! Such compassion! Such strength! Such perseverance! Such courage! This is a TRUE MASTERPIECE!!!
Some other books I've read that left their messages imbedded in my mind forever, I recommend...
21 out of 26 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 23, 2009
I originally purchased this as an audio book for a 15 hour cross country drive. The characters fostered such a range of emotions in me that all that mental activity just kept me charged up for the entire drive. The author offers first person narration as a tool for getting the reader inside the head and heart of the books main characters. There is tension and suspense and alot of humor. Thank heaven for the humor! When I was finished with the audio book, I gave it to this friend and that friend to take on their trips, but I so missed Skeeter and the other characters that I went out and bought the book, so I can carry it with me and read the characters' narrations at different points in the book. I haven't enjoyed anything about the South this much since Credence Clearwater Revival's Southern Rock or Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird.
20 out of 24 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 8, 2010
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An alternate title to this book could be "Nancy Drew Grows Up, Kind-Of". The plot is very contrived and written on about a fifth-grade reading level.
17 out of 170 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 31, 2011
It's really sad... the fact that so many of you believe that this CRAPTASTIC PIECE OF FICTIONAL FLUFF is an ACCURATE depiction of the treatment of Southern black domestic workers and the emotional effects of racism, bigotry and the Southern social class systems. The amount of raving reviews saddens me. I would be more likely to accept this mess if it came with a disclaimer: "This is in NO way an accurate depiction of the black experience. PLEASE DO NOT READ with the expectation of enlightenment." And the movie....NO. I can't and I won't. Putting this material in a motion picture and releasing it to the masses continues to reinforce the FICTION. So many offenses and inaccuracies on so many levels...But put a blond wig on it and the sheep will accept as truth.
The perpetuation of the stereotypical images and attitudes that Stockett describes DOES make this book a complete waste of time for me and others who know more about the Black South. Why create more literary historical fluff with no real intention of enlightening others to the REAL dynamics between black domestic workers and their employers? Or better yet, why can't a black woman tell this story? TRUTH: Most black women in the 1960s would NEVER have trusted any white woman (especially their employer) to "tell their story". Hell, if the privileged lot really wanted to find true stories of domestic workers, there are plenty of women still living that worked in households cleaning during the Civil Rights Era. My own grandmother cleaned houses! Would it have been too hard to film actual women and let them tell it in their own words??? It definitely would have been more accurate and believable. Then maybe the vernacular would have been more realistic. The vernacular Stockett attempts to recreate: atrocious! If I wanted to hear this "recreation" of the truth, I'd watch Shirley Temple and Stepin Fetchit movies all day. Seriously, why would a college-educated, hard-working, seemingly honest woman decide to steal? There's no explanation or motive that would cause this action, but Stockett wants to create a storyline, so she demonizes the black woman who otherwise has no ill intentions? And the idea that all the white Southerners spoke correct English?!? Puh-leez! I'm black, lived in TN and visited MS, AL, GA all my life, and the majority of older whites that I come across seem to have the same speaking manner as older blacks.
What really scares me is I can imagine that all these glowing reviews are from a particular demographic. "This book really takes me back to the good ole days when my black mammy took care of our whole family in exchange for second-class citizen status. Oh, we loved Mammy so much! I can't believe it was so bad! Stockett's the best writer ever! I feel so enlightened now that I know some black people didn't like cleaning up after white folks!" Sorry, but if you truly believe you are reading into some secret silent truth about the black domestic Southern experience, you are sorely and sadly mistaken. Try "Go Tell It on the Mountain" by Baldwin if you would really like a more realistic depiction. If you prefer to feel like some privileged intellectual that communicates the experience of oppressed people by stereotypical literary recreation of history...READ THIS BOOK AND NO OTHER!
Sad that you all believe this is such a touching emotional story of strength and compassion for all. This "novel" may shed ligh
16 out of 72 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 3, 2011
First off, I'll admit that this book was a really engaging read - it kept me hooked until the end. Still, it made me hugely uncomfortable, mostly because of the way Stockett dealt with the black characters.
For one, why do all of the black characters speak in heavy dialect, and all of the white characters speak standard English? This is Jackson, Mississippi, it is not as though the white people did not have Southern accents too - they may have been different, but they were certainly present. As it is written, this seems to privilege the speech of the white characters over that of the black characters, the same way we, as a society, value standard English over any kind of dialect.
Secondly, I was extremely uncomfortable with the way that the black maids involved in the writing of the book are so completely grateful to Skeeter at the end. Of course, they couldn't have done it without her (publish a book, that is) but that's because she was white and that afforded her particular opportunities. She's not some shining hero who saved them from the darkness and oppression of their lives - she's just their co-writer. And, in the end, they're left in pretty much the same position as before, maybe with the help of some meager royalty checks, while she jets of to New York and fame and glory.
The fact that Stockett chooses to write the maids' stories in first person at all is pretty presumptuous. I'm not sure how much research she did, but it seems to me like she is far from being someone who could accurately reflect their experiences and thoughts. She even admits to as much in interviews!
Basically this whole novel is really, really problematic for anyone who is even peripherally aware of racial issues. I wouldn't exactly tell people not to read it, but I hope that when they do they come to it with a very critical eye and a background in genuinely good literature about the black experience (maybe Toni Morrison?)
16 out of 54 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 22, 2010
I read the rave reviews and was looking forward to this book, but was very much disappointed. I found it predictable, annoying and fluffy. Do not recommend.
16 out of 86 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 30, 2011
Great story! Would read others by this author. Would like to see a sequel
15 out of 17 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 10, 2010
Such an amazing book. My only expectation going in was that it was on the bestsellers list, and I've heard a lot about it. I didn't realize what an addicting story these three women had me in store for. It was suspenseful at times, touching, supremely entertaining, and finally wonderfully pulled together. I haven't enjoyed a book this much in quite a few months. If you haven't read it yet, please pick up a copy and get to it!
14 out of 15 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 19, 2010
I became completely immersed in the story of the 3 main characters. As a resident of a border state, I remember taking a Greyhound bus through southern states as a young teen enroute to visit my Grandfather in FLA during the early 60's, and being apalled at the "white" and "colored" signs on restrooms, drinking fountains, etc., and the shantytowns we traveled through. And I remember my own working Mom hiring a black woman to do some ironing in our home, and wondering when and how she could do that all day, 6 days a week for different families, and still take care of her own 5 young children. Later, I knew people in CA whose Mexican maids and nannies raised and loved their children, though the employees' own kids the same age or younger, had been left behind with relatives. I suppose that still goes on. This book makes you think about segregation, civil rights and the race/class divide in the south like Uncle Tom's Cabin made people think about slavery. I understand why H.B. Stowe, a white woman, had to be the one to open our eyes about slavery in 1857--but not why a gifted black author didn't beat Kathryn Stockett to the presses with an equally-well-written (as The Help) account of life as experienced by domestic servants in white southern households during the pre-civil-rights era.
14 out of 16 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 12, 2010
I read this book last year and can't believe how it has taken off! I was pretty unimpressed with the book since I did not like the message it presented. I was born in New Orleans and had a black nanny until I was 6 years old. I can't imagine anyone treating another person the way that those characters were depicted. No wonder there is such a race problem that is perpetrated today. I guess reading about something that occurred at around the same time I would have been in a similar situation makes me sad to think that people don't always treat others as they would like to be treated and can be callous and biased about someone who does not look like him or her.
11 out of 50 people found this review helpful.
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Overview
The wildly popular New York Times bestseller and reading group favorite.Aibileen is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, who's always taken orders quietly, but lately she's unable to hold her bitterness back. Her friend Minny has never held her tongue but now must somehow keep secrets about her employer that leave her speechless. White socialite Skeeter just graduated college. She's full of ambition, but without a husband, she's considered a failure. Together, these seemingly different women join together to write a tell-all book about work as a black maid in the South, that could forever alter their destinies and the life of a small town... ...