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Serena Burdick

Autor von The Girls with No Names

4 Werke 667 Mitglieder 30 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Werke von Serena Burdick

The Girls with No Names (2020) 323 Exemplare
The Stolen Book of Evelyn Aubrey (2022) 237 Exemplare
Find Me in Havana (2021) 54 Exemplare

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Find me in Havana is the story of Nina and her mother, movie star Estelita. Written in back and forth perspectives like letters to the other, Find me in Havana takes the reader from 12-year old Nina's experiences of growing up with her mother and grandmother, to being kidnapped by her father and taken home to Mexico, to being rescued by her mother and taking her to Cuba and then back home to the United States. We follow Estelita through her numerous relationships, her acting and singing career and motherhood.

The two are bound not only by the mother-child relationship, but by their struggles, traumas, and successes. There is a lot going on in this book and Serena Burdick does a great job keeping the reader on track. I found the beginning a bit tough to sink into and the ending was a little lack luster.

Find Me in Havana is worth the read but not my favorite by Ms. Burdick.
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LyndaWolters1 | 8 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 3, 2024 |
PLEASE READ. THE FUTURE OF WOMEN AND THEIR RIGHTS DEPENDS ON KNOWING THE PAST.

This is a great book, and the fact that it is available during our current time in history is also incredibly timely.

Serena Burdick takes us on a fictional ride during the turn of the 19th Century with Luella, a headstrong fifteen-year-old, and Effie, her sickly younger sister, who adores Luella. The girls grow up in an affluent family in New York City during a time when women have no rights and, at the behest of a male (think father, husband, judge), can be "sentenced" to a reformatory known as a laundry house. These sentences ranged from about three years to indefinite. The transgressions for landing a female in a laundry house were anything from kissing a boy to disobeying the head male of the house (again, think father, husband, or brother).

Luella runs away, and Effie, who thinks their father sent Luella to Mercy House as punishment for her bold behavior, gets herself checked into the laundry house to find Luella. We follow Effie's days of work, torcher, and wrongful imprisonment at Mercy House.

Catholic Nuns ran the laundry houses, wherein they took in the wash of the wealthy in the community and pocketed the money. The girls sentenced to these places were often literally worked to death. Many were left there and forgotten; all were abused and abandoned.

We learn about these laundry houses from Ms. Burdick. They began in Ireland and sprung up all over the United States, hundreds of them throughout the country, where thousands of women were sent for any number of transgressions. Ireland has recognized its past in this regard; the United States has not. As a result, these women have essentially gone into obscurity; they are The Girls with No Names.

This book, released in 2020, touches on many issues that people in 2022 need to pay attention to, lest the past repeats itself.

READ THIS BOOK. READ BETWEEN THE LINES AND BRING IT INTO TODAY'S CONTEXT. You will not regret it. (And it's an excellent book besides - bonus!)
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LyndaWolters1 | 12 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 3, 2024 |

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Werke
4
Mitglieder
667
Beliebtheit
#37,822
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
30
ISBNs
44
Sprachen
3
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1

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