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The Dollmaker is the story of Gertie Nevels, a Kentucky woman who is uprooted from the home that she loves and forced to live in Detroit during the Second World War. It is a tragedy that springs from the loss of agrarian life to industrial labor, the misunderstands and lack of communications between spouses, and the burying of the artistic spirit and individuality beneath the struggle to simply exist.

There are dozens of ideas in this book that could be discussed and debated at length, but what kept coming to the fore for me was the way one life, one person, can be smothered in the crowd of humanity, and how much humanity itself suffers for this every time it happens. Life in Detroit is a nightmare for Gertie, but not only for Gertie; the alley she lives in is peopled with lives being beaten down and wasted. The factions that divide these people are much less obvious to the reader than the squalid ties that bind them. The contrast between the deprivations of the farm life that begins the novel and the deprivations of the life Gertie finds in Detroit are stark, and while Kentucky is not paradise, it would appear to be when weighed against Detroit.

There is also the religious element that runs through the book: “Religious” in the broadest sense of the word. For Gertie is searching for God, for Christ, and even for Judas. She looks to understand her fate and whether her choices are truly her own or ordained by some higher power. Indeed, there are times when I wondered where God is in the lives of so many helpless and vulnerable people. As is usually the case, the people who most profess to speak in His name are the least like Him.

My heart was broken so many times during the reading of this novel that it felt sometimes as if there were an iron band squeezing it. It is in excess of 600 pages and I strongly feel that not a word is wasted. Right into the Favorites folder with this one, with my only complaint being that the print in the version I was reading was insufferably small for these old eyes. I suppose I will need to be on the lookout for a copy with larger print, since I can easily see the need to read it again someday.


 
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mattorsara | 21 reseñas más. | Aug 11, 2022 |
This novel was grim and depressing, but also hauntingly lovely. It is a close look into the lives of those who moved to Detroit during WWII to be part of the war effort, and how it affected them after the war was over and the jobs went away. A heavy read, but one that will likely stay with the reader years after it has been read.
 
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bookwyrmqueen | 21 reseñas más. | Oct 25, 2021 |
I got yer Great American Novel right here.

In the years just prior to American entry into World War II, Nunn Ballew is raising his family, trying to restore the family land that he bought back with money earned in the mines, and hunting an especially pernicious red fox, known as King Devil, who has been plaguing the district and killing far too much livestock since Ballew's return five years earlier. Nunn is obsessed with King Devil, and during fox season, it's a major distraction from needed farm work, which he knows is vital to his long-term plans.

But this isn't just Nunn's story. It is every bit as much the story of his wife Milly, his daughter Suse, the local midwife Sue Annie, and an interconnected web of extended family and neighbors in the area of Little Smoky Creek, Kentucky.

The lives of the Kentucky hill people are hard, and they're just coming out of the Great Depression and into the beginnings of the Second World War. Some of the men are working for the WPA; others, like Nunn, are cautiously exploring the benefits of working with the AAA and county agricultural agents. And they're running their foxhounds most nights during fox season, trying to get King Devil.

Meanwhile, for all that the men are juggling, the women's lives are harder. Food grown needs to be canned, smoked, ground, baked, processed somehow to last from harvest to the next growing season. Nunn's decision to buy two purebred foxhounds means selling what would have been their winter meat that year. Improvements to the farm mean no money for Sunday shoes or the bus to high school in town for Suse. Milly and Suse and the oldest boy, Lee Roy, work hard to make ends meet and fill in the gaps Nunn leaves when he's running his hounds, but often see themselves going without things that make them feel exposed before other wives and older children among the neighbors.

And it's Sue Annie and Milly who labor long, hard, and heartbreakingly to save a neighbor's youngest child, while haunted by memories of their own lost children.

This is an intimate and moving look at life among the hill people. It's an older time and a different place than most of us know. The lower status and hard conditions for women are accepted by all as the natural order, and Arnow doesn't regard it as alien, but she also show the ways in which the women are the strength and necessary binding of the families and the whole community. Nunn seems to have a suspicion, a hope, that his daughter can do something more, if he can find the means to let her. He seems to be catching wind of how the changes disrupting their community can bring good as well as ill--but it's a hard, challenging time, and nothing comes easily.

There's some emotionally rough stuff here, and it's not a cheerful, chirpy, happily-eve-after ending. Neither is it grim and hopeless and negative for everyone.

This is a rich, strong, narrative about a piece of American life and culture that rarely gets respect or understanding.

Recommended for everyone with pulse.

I bought this book.
 
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LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
I read this book years ago on the advice of a friend from Eastern Kentucky. I still think about it...an amazing American story rich with the trials of strong people living difficult lives with great dignity.
 
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ioplibrarian | 21 reseñas más. | Aug 26, 2018 |
came in the mail yesterday. it is really a good book to read. a must read for everyone
 
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KimSalyers | 21 reseñas más. | Oct 6, 2016 |
came in the mail yesterday. it is really a good book to read. a must read for everyone
 
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KimSalyers | 21 reseñas más. | Oct 2, 2016 |
"In the end they all...most...adjust"
By sally tarbox on 1 Dec. 2013
Format: Mass Market Paperback
A beautiful and heart wrenching novel: it opens with Gertie Nevels, a tough hillbilly woman, taking her sick child to hospital. Unafraid to perform surgery on him to save his life, or to force a reluctant army officer to give them a lift, Gertie seems in control of her life - not least her plans to purchase their own farm in her beloved Kentucky with her secret savings, once her husband is called up to fight in WW2.

But when her husband is sent instead to work in a Detroit factory, Gertie bows to the pressure of those around her to join her man, and she and her children find themselves in one of the overcrowded and slumlike 'projects'.
Gertie, the 'dollmaker' of the title, seeks release from her surroundings by losing herself in her woodcarving; the creation of a figure of Christ slowly takes shape throughout the novel, despite her family's pressure to turn out cheap, tawdry dolls on a jig-saw, to make a few dollars.
How the family make out in this vastly different environment, where war takes lives but simultaneously guarantees jobs; where different religions and races are brought together; where the beauties of nature are far removed from the furnaces of the steel mills, makes for an unforgettable novel. The unexpected ending really left me reeling.½
 
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starbox | 21 reseñas más. | Jul 10, 2016 |
One of th every few books I never finished because the characters made me too angry.
 
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RachelNF | 21 reseñas más. | Jan 15, 2016 |
Authentic voice. Inspired acceptance and compassion in me. Tragedy in the classical sense.
 
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nggray | 21 reseñas más. | Feb 5, 2015 |
When I was the same age as Susie Schnitzer, the protagonist, I read this book over and over. I identified strongly with Susie's moral stance and loved the idea of a secret room all my own. Now I recognize the novel's many flaws, but it is a fascinating period piece. The edition I have (from 2012) has a scholarly introduction so someone must be looking at Arnow's work. She is, of course, best known for her book, The Dollmaker.
 
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PatsyMurray | Jan 17, 2014 |
500. The Dollmaker, by Harriette Arnow (read 1 July 1956) A story of Kentucky people going to Detroit during the war. Not a bad book and I still remember it after over 50 years
 
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Schmerguls | 21 reseñas más. | Jun 26, 2013 |
This is American fiction at its best. The main character, Gertie Nevels, is the strongest, most independent woman and mother I have ever "met" in a book, and I use quotes, but this is such a well-written story, with the author using the regional dialiect when the characters were speaking, that I feel like I did meet Gertie. World War II is raging, and Gertie and her husband and five children live in the hills of Kentucky farming on rented land, but Gertie's dream is to buy her own farm, and she has been saving for that day for many years, not even telling her own husband Clovis because she is afraid he will requisition the money for a new truck. Soon after Clovis heads off to join the Army, Gertie receives a windfall from her beloved brother who died serving in the war. But just as she is about to purchase her farm, circumstances and guilt (due to a, I suspect, mentally ill mother but that's another story within the story) force her to join Clovis in Detroit. The Army chose not to take him, so he found a job in a factory. What follows is a harsh life for Gertie interspersed with tragedy. Detroit was a boom city then but did not hold much appeal for a country girl from Kentucky, and Gertie faces many hardships: harsh weather, debt, lack of food, prejudice against "hillbillies," corruption, violence. The children also face numerous challenges going from the backwoods life to city life. Gertie is a survivor though and fights hard for her family and remains hopeful for the future. This was an excellent read and also a good history lesson that left me grateful for all the luxuries we have in America today.½
 
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CatieN | 21 reseñas más. | Jun 29, 2011 |
One of my favorite books!
 
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Bookish59 | 21 reseñas más. | Jan 28, 2011 |
The world is at war, and the army is stealing away the men, and those that are left are being hauled off to work in the factories in order to assist the war effort. In rural Kentucky Gertie is lucky enough to still have her husband around, he drives the coal truck, but knows that this situation cannot last. He has his date with the army already lined up. But she is preparing as best she can. She has been saving her money and almost has enough to offer on a nearby farm. Without having to pay half what they earn on rent Gertie and her family will be able to plan for the future. But on the eve of her plans coming to fruition all is ruined and she must uproot her family and follow her husband to the city of Detroit.

Full review: http://www.susanhatedliterature.net/2010/10/23/the-dollmaker/
 
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Fence | 21 reseñas más. | Oct 23, 2010 |
i read this book in my 20s and loved it. i am now in my 60s and don't much like fiction. i found this VERY long. i also felt very hopeless for the people. i had more hope when i was young.
 
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mahallett | 21 reseñas más. | Nov 21, 2009 |
I discovered this book when I was 10 yrs old. My first enlightment of women's issues
 
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suesper1 | 21 reseñas más. | Jun 23, 2009 |
American Wife lent me a new perpesctive of the public figure. I found many insights into the complexities of being a first lady in this novel that I probably would not have come up with on my own. Being a lefty, dare I say that I could at many times empathize with the Blackwells? Other times I found myself muttering obscenities. Whatever one's political view, the book is great!
 
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ldeem | 21 reseñas más. | Dec 20, 2008 |
This is one of the most impressive works to ever come out of the Appalachian genre. Arnow manages to breathe life into her characters, and the reader feels just how desperate they are to adjust to their new lives in Detroit. Until the very last page of the very last chapter, I found myself anxiously rooting for this family, and horrified at the horrors they had been subjected to in their lives. The interactions between the characters are so real that you nearly feel guilty for eavesdropping on their private discussions! Heart wrenching and realistic to its core!
 
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jfslone | 21 reseñas más. | Apr 14, 2008 |
This was an excellent book about simple people from Kentucky who move to Detroit to work in the factories during WW2.
As I had just recently finished viewing "The War" by Ken Burns, I found it interesting to compare the patriotic theme from the movie with a more realistic view told through the eyes of the exploited working class and thier families. Compelling. Written in 1954 but still timely.
 
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sunqueen | 21 reseñas más. | Oct 20, 2007 |
(#28 in the 2007 book challenge)

This book was depressing, didactic, full of despair and in parts, disturbingly graphic (and this review is brought to you by the letter D). That said, it was an amazing book and I can't believe I made it to this advanced age without reading it. A Kentucky farmwoman and her children reluctantly follow her husband to Detroit during WWII, where he works at one of the auto factories for the war effort. No kidding, these people can outJoad the Joads any day of the week, and twice on Sundays. Everything about the rural experience is good, and everything about the urban experience is poisonous. Plus, all the dialogue is written out in Kentucky hill dialect. I am sure my encouraging description is making people want to read this, but seriously, it was one of those books that I couldn't put down. By rights, it should be too heavy-handed to enjoy, but the writing was breathtaking and it really succeeds in making you feel like you are right there, suffering through Detroit winters and lock-outs and war department telegrams and debt and agony.

Grade: A++
Recommended: To people who might enjoy wallowing in a dismal family saga, people who like lots of domestic detail about homefront experiences, and especially to anyone interested in the rural emigration sparked by WWII, which I always feel you don't hear nearly enough about. Reconstruction and the Depression hog all the rural exodus stuff, I think.
5 vota
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delphica | 21 reseñas más. | Aug 4, 2007 |
If anybody has a copy they want to trade with me. This one is nearly 20 dollars for just the ebook which I think is outrageous.
 
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Marlene-NL | 21 reseñas más. | Mar 12, 2016 |
Orig1nally published in 1954. I want to read this because of the brilliant 1984 ABC movie starring Jane Fonda about an Appalachian family that moves to Detroit to find work.
 
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jwood652 | 21 reseñas más. | Sep 28, 2013 |
 
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EvieN | May 23, 2011 |
www.thebookpond.se
 
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anlor43 | 21 reseñas más. | Apr 13, 2007 |
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