Ratings13
Average rating3.4
If you choose to read only one historical fiction work this year, choose The Only Woman in the Room by Marie Benedict. Prior to reading this book, I had no idea who Hedy Lamarr was and I'm ashamed of that fact after having finished it. She was a strong, powerful woman that does not nearly get the credit that she deserves. We hear of Marie Curie, Margaret Sanger, Susan B. Anthony, but quite rarely, if ever, do we hear of Hedy Lamarr and the amazing contribution she made that has led us to such luxuries as Bluetooth, GPS, and of course, Wi-Fi.
Edited 2/6/19 after revisiting the book: 3.5 out of 5 stars
I liked The Only Woman in the Room at first but the longer I sat with it... the more the ending bothered me. I really liked the beginning and thought that it was moving well and I was interested, but then... the latter half of the book seemed very rushed and Hedy's intelligence and her scientific knowledge seemed to come out of nowhere. She went from being a token in the room to suddenly knowing how to create a frequency jumping device for missiles. Honestly I would rather have had 50, even 75 more pages added to the book so that way more of that could be fleshed out. I also didn't like how Hedy seemed to just... give up at the end. She was such a spitfire woman with such fortitude and moxy and then the ending just seemed so.. uncharacteristic for her. To quote one of the ladies I discussed this book with, it seemed as if “the author did just what everyone else did to Hedy throughout her life: she dismissed her.”