This novel is set in Boston in the early 1900's and tells the story of the life of Addie Baum. It is told by Addie now that she is eighty-five and is looking back at her life and telling her favorite granddaughter all about it. Addie's family is Jewish and her parents are immigrants. They come to America for a better life but expect to raise their three girls the way things were done in the old country. Addie wants something more, something better. She wants an education and a job that feels like she is contributing to society along with a family.
She joins a library group where she meets other girls who want the same kind of things she does. That opens doors to a summer camp where she meets women from all classes and makes friends. They help her get her first job at a newspaper and she meets more mentors there. Addie is grateful for any help she gets and relishes knowing women who have accomplished what she wants. Later, after a first love affair that doesn't go well, she meets her true love and they eventually marry.
Anita Diamante is an American author who writes about women and their place in society. Her early book, The Red Tent, pointed out the injustice of menstrual shaming. She writes about women who yearn for an education and how they use that to make lives different from what was traditional. In this novel, Addie is a strong, determined woman who never stops trying to make her life have meaning. This book is recommended for historical and women's fiction readers.





























