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Average rating4.7
“A powerful, authentic voice for a generation of women whose struggles were erased from history—a heart-smashing debut that completely satisfies.” —Jamie Ford, New York Times bestselling author of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet A young woman finds the most powerful love of her life when she gives birth at an institution for unwed mothers in 1883 Philadelphia. She is told she must give up her daughter to avoid lifelong poverty and shame. But she chooses to keep her. Pregnant, left behind by her lover, and banished from her Quaker home and teaching position, Lilli de Jong enters a home for wronged women to deliver her child. She is stunned at how much her infant needs her and at how quickly their bond overtakes her heart. Mothers in her position face disabling prejudice, which is why most give up their newborns. But Lilli can’t accept such an outcome. Instead, she braves moral condemnation and financial ruin in a quest to keep herself and her baby alive. Confiding their story to her diary as it unfolds, Lilli takes readers from an impoverished charity to a wealthy family's home to the streets of a burgeoning American city. Drawing on rich history, Lilli de Jong is both an intimate portrait of loves lost and found and a testament to the work of mothers. "So little is permissible for a woman," writes Lilli, “yet on her back every human climbs to adulthood.”
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One of the best books I've read in a very long time. Her writing puts you in the middle of the story. You can feel, smell, hear, taste, see the whole story unraveling.
Told in diary entries, Lilli de Jong, the novel's titular character, tells us through her own tale about the cruel fate that unmarried mothers had to endure around the end of the 19th century. We follow along as she is shunned by family and acquaintances, as she delivers her baby in an institution for disgraced women, and then scrambles to survive and to nurture her baby in a society that won't rent room or give jobs to people like her. What could have easily become a very bleak tale, is saved by Lilli's gentle and insightful voice. She's thoughtful as she contemplates the fates of the lower working classes and the fallen, without her voice ever becoming too didactic.
This is an absolutely breathtaking novel that immediately got under my skin. Beautifully written, Benton expertly evokes the experience of new motherhood: the radical shift in identity, the sudden responsibility, and the intense love. I was rooting for Lilli from start to finish, and couldn't wait to return to the book whenever I had to put it down. The book is also relevant to many of today's cultural conversations about female sexuality and women's rights. The writing is excellent; think Geraldine Brooks.