The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant

The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant has been on my to-read list for one reason only — I love the cover! Attraction to a cover is a good enough reason to give a book a try, but once I got into this historical fiction story, I’m glad I finally moved it to the front of the line.

The Boston Girl is the Brown Bag Book Club pick for the Wednesday, November 26 discussion at 1pm at Eastern. Join us and share your thoughts on the book. Here are some highlights from my reading of the book:

It’s 1985 and 85-year-old Addie is telling her story to her granddaughter. Settle in.

The Boston Girl really starts in 1915, when, at the age of 15, Addie Baum is brought into the fold of the Saturday Club in the Boston North End neighborhood’s Salem Street Settlement House. Clearly intelligent and eager to learn, the group’s chaperone Miss Chevalier introduces Addie to the institution’s book clubs and evening lectures. Addie is even asked to join the Saturday Club for a week’s summer vacation at Rockport Lodge on Cape Ann, a retreat for lower- and working-class girls to experience the seaside. While there, friendships are cemented and Addie experiences her first taste of romance.

Addie’s home life is tumultuous in comparison. Her parents are immigrants from Russia who work in factories and take in mending to make ends meet. Addie lives in a one room apartment with her parents and older sister Celia. Her other sister, Betty, is not spoken of since she had the audacity to move out of the family home unmarried. To an Americanized family, a woman in her 20s working in a department store and living at a boarding house isn’t something to be ashamed of, but for the Baum parents she is seen as selfish.

But family dynamics continuously change as Celia gets married and Addie starts working for her kindly brother-in-law Levine. Levine also makes sure Betty is included in family celebrations and holidays, bringing new ideas to the family that help them continue to assimilate to American culture.

Through difficult family circumstances, Addie finds relief, comfort and support in her friends. They encourage her to continue in school, help her find jobs and find dates.

Historical moments are seen through the eyes of this average young adult. The 1918 flu pandemic strikes the family; she dates a shell-shocked soldier from World War I and Addie later has a brush with Betty Friedan.

Chapters are short, sometimes filled with family drama and heartache. Other chapters filled with hope and the power of female friendship. The novel is conversational. After all, it is the story a grandmother is telling her granddaughter. A glimpse at life in the 1910s and 1920s Boston, seen through the eyes of one young woman. Her life isn’t extraordinary, but it is interesting and Addie is a character worth spending with. The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant will remind readers that even an ordinary life is a life worth telling.

The Boston Girl is available as part of the Davenport Library’s Book Club collection, in regular print, large print, as a Book on CD in Rivershare, and as an eAudiobook on the Libby app through Bridges.