
Three ordinary women are about to take one extraordinary step... Aibileen
is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, raising her seventeenth
white child. She's always taken orders quietly, but lately it leaves her
with a bitterness she can longer bite back. Her friend Minny has
certainly never held her tongue, or held on to a job for very long, but
now she's working for a newcomer with secrets that leave her speechless.
And white socialite Skeeter has just returned from college with
ambition and a degree but, to her mother's lament, no husband. Normally
Skeeter would find solace in Constantine, the beloved maid who raised
her, but Constantine has inexplicably disappeared. Together, these
seemingly different women join to work on a project that could forever
alter their destinies and the life of a small town-to write, in secret, a
tell-all book about what it's really like to work as a black maid in
the white homes of the South. Despite the terrible risks they will have
to take, and the sometimes humorous boundaries they will have to cross,
these three women unite with one intention: hope for a better day.
The Help is one of the most beautiful books I think I've ever read! If it's not yet on the reading material list for schools, it should be! This book made me feel; it made me laugh, cry, and learn how to see us as "just two people". Kathryn Stockett's, The Help is amazing, rich and heartfelt. Its a story about deep love, growing, looking past the hatred and seeing people for who they really are. This is a book I will never forget!
There are so many things I loved about the book but my favorite are these;
Skeeter is writing the stories of the maids, She gets to Faye Belle's story. "Her stories unfold like soft linen. She remembers hiding in the steamer trunk with a little white girl while Yankee soldiers stomped through the house. Twenty years ago, she held that same white girl, by then an old woman, in her arms while she died. Each proclaimed their love as best friends. Swore that death could not change this. That color mean nothing. The white woman's grandson still pays Faye Belle's rent. When she's feeling strong, Faye Belle sometimes goes over and cleans up his kitchen."
Abileen is telling Mae Mobley one of her "secret stories". "We go in her room, where we like to set. I get up in the big chair and she get up on me and smile, bounce a little. Tell me, tell me about the brown wrapping. And the present. She so excited, she squirming. She has to jump off my lap, squirm a little to get it out. Then she crawl back up. That's her favorite story cause when I tell it, she get two presents. I take the brown wrapping from my piggly wiggly grocery bag and wrap up a little something, like a peice of candy, inside. Then I use the white paper from my Cole's drug store bag and wrap another one just like it. She take it real serious, the unwrapping, letting me tell the story bout how it ain't the color a the wrapping that count, it's what we is inside. "
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