Sunday 23 March 2014

'The Help' | Kathryn Stockett

I’m very late to getting this book under my belt but if like me, you missed out on all the excitement around The Help when it first came out, let me tell you: you NEED this novel in your life. Whether your thing is suspense, humour, sociology, history, politics or anything else you can think of, Kathryn Stockett manages to draw everything together in a tale about the lives of African-American maids working for white families in the town of Jackson, Mississippi, which is as touching as it is page-turning.

Set in the 1960s, The Help alternates between first-person narration from the three main characters: Aibileen, a hard working maid, Minny, her outspoken friend, and Skeeter, the daughter of a wealthy white family with aspirations to become a journalist rather than following the other women of Jackson by marrying early and spending her time planning social events and playing bridge.

After Aibileen confides in Skeeter about her son Treelore’s dreams of writing and publishing a book about the lives of the black communities in the Deep South, Skeeter comes up with a radical and risky idea to compile, with the help of the maids who work for her own friends, a documentation of their experiences working for white families. It takes a while for Skeeter to convince the maids to share their experiences, for fear of being fired by the very employers they are describing – though eventually the will to tell their important stories brings them round to the idea. But in a town steeped in racism, prejudice and divide, it is vital that the contributors remain anonymous, not to mention the difficulties of getting such a controversial piece published.


The Help conveys an important message about the completely contrasting lives of the two worlds in Jackson, despite the fact that the two work and live alongside one another every day. As well as being beautifully and uniquely written, it tells you a lot about the history of prejudice and fear in the Southern American states.

PS. My contribution to the 'no make up selfie' campaign, also to be found on Facebook! I have to say I was a little sceptical of this at first but seeing how much money has been raised by this alone I'm impressed at it's impact - it's not to say that selfies alone are beating cancer but every little helps and why not make donating and raising awareness a little bit fun?! So if you're reading this I nominate YOU for a #nomakeupselfie and to donate to Cancer Research or a cancer charity of your choice (online or text BEAT to 70007).


Sunday 16 March 2014

'Big Brother' | Lionel Shriver

Mum brought this back from the library while I was at home for a two-week university holiday and I’m SO glad she chose it – this is probably the best book I’ve read in 2014 so far.

Lionel Shriver provides an emotional and often shocking account of the obesity crisis in America through an autobiographical perspective.
Credit: Goodreads
Pandora, based loosely on Shriver herself, is a successful businesswoman meandering through an unremarkable routine and a middle-of-the-road marriage to obsessive, health-conscious Fletcher. When her brother Edison, a formerly successful jazz musician comes back into her Iowa life, hundreds of pounds heavier than when she last saw him, his obesity has an incredible and immediate impact on her marriage, family, household and state of mind. Pandora sacrifices all she has worked for to try and help her brother, implementing an extreme weight-loss regime and moving out of her marital home to give around-the-clock support.

But behind Edison’s obesity lies a cycle of depression and instability. Some reviews I’ve read have criticised Shriver’s characterisation and depiction of overeating and the problems attached to it, but personally I found the graphic and grotesque descriptions convincing and poignant. You feel like you need to find out whether Pandora and Edison are successful in their mission to get Edison back to his original size, and in that way Shriver held my attention for the duration of the novel.

Most importantly, reading this made me really think about our relationship with food – how we base our day to day lives around it, use it to celebrate and commemorate and enjoy, but on the other side of the coin, how the very thing that we depend on for sustenance can be wholly destructive. This is invoked from the outset when Shriver writes:

 "I have to wonder whether any of the true highlights of my forty some years have had to do with food. I don't mean celebratory dinners, good fellowship; I mean salivation, mastication and peristalsis." 

This sentence put the idea of obesity and why so many people overeat to an extreme degree in a new perspective and this idea is one that is emphasised throughout the rest of the novel.
Big Brother conveys an important message as obesity is undoubtedly one of the biggest problems for health and society of our time, particularly in the Western world. Shriver’s writing is nuanced, careful and gripping and in my opinion reveals something about why humans eat to excess and the rebounding consequences.