Book description
The #1 New York Times bestselling novel and basis for the Academy Award-winning film-a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don't-nominated as one of America's best-loved novels by PBS's The Great American Read.
Aibileen is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi,âŠ
Why read it?
6 authors picked The Help as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I must be honest: this is perhaps my favorite novel. I love Stockettâs narrative voice, showcased wonderfully in the POVs of three characters: Abilene, Minnie, and Skeeter. Stockett recreates the Jackson, Mississippi, of the early 1960s, and I easily got sucked into the dramas of each character. The only downside to this book is that itâs a one-hit wonder without a sequel. The movie was excellent, too.
From Emerald's list on take place in Americaâs deep South.
I LOVE books about women who wonât be told what to do.
In 1960s Mississippi, black women were "the help." Other jobs werenât open to them. They cooked and cleaned for white people, and they raised their children, but they werenât allowed to use the same bathroom. And they couldnât be friends with the children theyâd raised when they were adults.Â
Enter white would-be journalist Miss Skeeter aka Eugenia Phelan, who wants change, not least so she can find Constantine, who raised her, then disappeared. Enter Aibileen and Minny, black "helps" also wanting change, especially for their children. They recruitâŠ
From Julia's list on improbable friendships.
I admit that I was annoyed with this book after the first few chapters.
I had just settled into the rhythm and style of the story, told by one of the main characters. But after a few chapters, the novel switched to the voice of a different main character. This happened throughout the book, as the story is told from the perspective of three main characters. It was annoying at first. But as I continued reading, I began to appreciate the change.Â
Each character has individual struggles, and each character has something to learn. Having three different voices magnifies theâŠ
From Galynne's list on telling a story to touch the heart.
If you love The Help...
It feels strange that a book written in the time of my youth is historical fiction, but it is so!
I found great resonance in this tale set in Jackson, Mississippi in the early 1960s. Like Skeeter, I was confronted by the disparate roles of black women caretakers who nourished my early years counterpoised against the cruelties and injustices of the world they lived in. Unlike her, I didnât really comprehend it or write about it until I was much older.
Fighting the pressures of her family and society to settle down and marry, Skeeter determines to tell the storiesâŠ
From T.K.'s list on historyâs remarkable women.
The Help is set in Mississippi in the 1960âs, and is about an unusual friendship between three women, one White and two Black. The two Black women are maids. The White woman is a recent college graduate. All three find that they donât fit within the strict confines of Mississippiâs rigid social structure, a structure thatâs been around since before the Civil War. Some may think The Help is another âWhite woman to the Rescueâ story, but itâs not. Stockett brings her characters alive and tells their stories with pitch-perfect acumen.
From Toni's list on cultural opposites, southern politics and families.
The Help stayed with me. I could relate to the mixed emotions of loving parts of your job, but hating other parts, and shoving down that uncomfortable feeling you get when you know youâre not treated right, but could lose everything if you speak out. I can only imagine how this must feel when itâs because of racism and segregation.
Itâs about how even small acts of resistance can change the world. A story about women who question the status quo, and who, at the risk of their own livelihoods, say, enough!
From Helen's list on historical fiction on women who changed history.
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