What a fantastic book! The Help, by Kathryn Stockett, which I read in audio format is a great slice of life in 1960's Jackson, Mississippi. This is a world where segregation between the races is very much a reality - and no well-to-do home would be complete without a black maid. We follow Aibileen, who is raising her seventeenth white child following the tragic death of her own son; her best friend, Minny, who has a tongue so sharp she is in danger of never getting another job; and Miss Skeeter, a white girl, just home from College, who needs to know why her
beloved maid has disappeared. Skeeter wants to be a writer and this leads her to forming a friendship with Aibileen, a gentle spirit who loves all the children she has raised for white employees. As she finds out more about life as a maid, both good and bad, she grows increasingly alienated from her family and white friends. This story is sad, funny and uplifting in equal measures. The three main characters each have a different narrator in the audio edition, which works really well. You are drawn into each woman's story which slowly but surely cross boundaries of age, race and law. I heartily recommend this book - especially in audio. I know it's just out as a film but I can't imagine the tale being better told than it is in the edition I've just read.
My star rating: FIVE.
The stats bit:
Length: 464 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99 (through Audible monthly subscription)
Other formats available in: print; unabridged audio CD; Ebook.
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