Archive for the ‘suffrage movement’ Tag
Bold Spirit by Linda Lawrence Hunt is subtitled Helga Estby’s Forgotten Walk Across Victorian America. That’s the grabber; unfortunately, the writing doesn’t quite measure up, but that’s not Hunt’s fault. She had to rely on deep-in-the-weeds research, primarily old newspapers. Helga’s notes about her journey were destroyed by family members.
In 1896, in pursuit of the opportunity to win $10,000 to save the family farm facing foreclosure, Helga and her oldest daughter Clara embarked on a walk across the United States. The journey took more than seven and a half months.
Helga was born in Norway, but immigrated as a young child with her mother and stepfather. She married at a young age and was soon homesteading with her husband and young child on the Minnesota plains. Thus, she was no stranger to hardship, which made the trek seem like a reasonable goal.
Stopping to find jobs along the way, they often sold their story to the local newspapers. The women also met with local and state politicians. This was in the midst of the William McKinley vs. William Jennings Bryan presidential election, and the suffrage movement was in full swing.
It was Helga and Clara’s plan to write a book once finished with their quest. However, reaction to their completed endeavor was unfavorable. After all, she’d left her husband, seven children, including an infant, behind. It wasn’t just her Norwegian community in Spokane who considered it scandalous. Once she returned, Helga’s family members were shamed by what was undertaken.
Bold Spirit: Helga Estby’s Forgotten Walk Across Victorian America
Three Bookmarks
First Anchor Books, 2003
307 pages, includes notes, bibliography, acknowledgements
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams is an engaging novel about how the complete edition of the Oxford English Dictionary came to be. In addition to its development, perhaps more importantly, it addresses women’s roles in the achievement.
Along with the words that make it into the initial version is the vocabulary that the mostly male lexicographers overlooked – either by design or ignorance. Here’s where narrator Esme comes in. As a young child she spent most of her time under the table where her widowed father and his colleagues collected words for inclusion in the dictionary.
When not in the “Scriptorium,” Esme is in the nearby home of James Murray where housemaid Lizzie cares for the young girl. Despite class differences, theirs is a relationship that endures as Esme grows up and begins her own collection of words. She starts with some discarded by the men and later adds the vernacular of working class women she discovers with Lizzie’s help.
Williams’s novel is inspired by true events, but isn’t just historical. The story is brought to life by the vivid personalities of the main characters, but also lesser, nonetheless equally important, ones. While the dictionary is being compiled (a decades-long endeavor), the arduous battle of the women’s suffrage movement is underway (another lengthy process). The backdrop of societal mores, the Great War and personal relationships imbues the work with emotion.
Words and their meanings are significant but their power is reflected in how they’re used and by whom.
The Dictionary of Lost Words
Four Bookmarks
Ballentine Books, 2021
388 pages (includes epilogue, author’s notes, timeline and book group discussion questions)