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65 of 68 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
I absolutely LOVED this book. Kathryn Stockett did an amazing job. I loved how the story was written from the perspectives of the different women. I enjoyed seeing the world through their very different eyes and watching them develop throughout the story. The beautifully descriptive writing drew me in and made me feel like I was right there. This is an intense story of...
Published on Feb 10 2009 by Tara Robertson

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19 of 23 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars They've done it again
I kept hearing all the excitement this book and its movie are generating, so I bought a copy and read it cover-to-cover. The author certainly has talent as a writer but I am disappointed at yet another *Great White Hope* story where groups or generations of disenfranchised minorities are powerless until the white hero or heroine swoops in and liberates these poor folk -...
Published 19 months ago by P. Sibun


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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, fantastic characters., Mar 3 2010
This review is from: The Help (Hardcover)
Loved this book. Fantastic character development, you can picture them so vividly. Really opened my eyes to how black women (in particular) were treated in the Southern states not too long ago. Would highly recommend.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars More help please, Sep 26 2011
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
The Help was written for the point of view of a white southern woman. There is nothing wrong with that.

For the most part she captured the frustration and the paradoxical bond of black women who were forced into a life of servitude for lack of any other means to earn a
livelihood.

My problem with The Help is that it did not go far enough in detailing interracial liasions of the opposite sex which we know is the dirty secret of the South.

Understandably Ms Stockett, who has been ostracized to some extent, would have been villified in Dixie.

I am left wondering how the Help would have evolved if it was written by an African American writer.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars the voice of Mississippi, July 12 2011
By 
Rhonda Willis "hockey fan" (Alberta, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
I could read this book over and over. I'm a person who loves to "hear" the words as I read. The way that Stockett captured the voices of the characters, and brought their Mississippi dialect to life was a real treat. I was transported. The story was compelling, the characters rich, and the history lesson much appreciated.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Help, Jun 3 2011
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
Awesome!! My reading co-ensided with my watching Freedom Riders and the result for me was emotional. This book is so well written and thought provoking, I don't have enough words.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars My Mammy would have loved this one..., Dec 12 2010
By 
S. Geen (hhn) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Help (Hardcover)
I had a Mammy, but unlike many of the HELP that Kathryn shares, My Mammy was my angel, she was the sisterI never had, the Mumm who was absent the friend everyone would cherish. As I read each page, I laughed, cried, felt sad, happy, emotional and downright involved. Kathryn shared many tales I had heard before... My Mammy Hughette was one of those ladies that knew when to keep silent, but never around me, we had this pac, never did our secrets be shared with anyone...I always protected her, she protected me... frankly I never saw her colour...to me she was my Mammy...
Each character that Kathyrn introduces was a slice of My Mammy...Pick this book up, read it, treasure it and share it..your heart will swell at the true stories behind their words....Love to see this on screen...
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Help by Kathryn Stockett, Oct 7 2009
By 
This review is from: The Help (Hardcover)
I loved this book. Couldn't put it down and can't wait for her next one! I highly recommend it to anyone who likes stories involving civil rights, historical fiction, racism and overcoming stupid ignorance.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars She desribed that little world as she views it through her own eyes, Feb 12 2012
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
This is the only book I read by Kathryn Stockett. It was hard to start at first because English is my second language and she is using a dialect which is very interesting but it took me a little while to get used to it. I found the book quite enterntaining and well written, and I must say I liked it but I don't think it's an amazing book.

It reminded me of the books written by one great author of my home country about his childhood in the village where the simple people`s amazing wisdom and intelligence outsmarted the silly and dumb people of nobility who often had much higher education, but no wisdom. In these books, the blue blooded people mistreated the peasantry who worked for them for ridiculously low wedges, by beating them, sending them to prison, taking their children, famishing them, etc and thus keeping them under a glass ceiling by instilling fear in them.

After reading The Help I searched online for both positive and negative reviews to get different opinions. I have noticed that a majority white americans, and all those immigrants who identify with whites, love this book like it's golden, and quite a number of African Americans may find it poor or actually offending to a certain degree. I noticed the same thing going around and asking my friends of different backgrounds. Immigrants who don`t identify themselves with either parties in this book tend to also like it very much.

It was definetely written through the eyes of a white girl living in a southern American family during a certain period of time. If you read the extra found in her book at the end she actually talks about her family maid who took care of her like a mother and her own regrets about her lack of appreciation and feelings of embarasement for the inappropriate pitty she felt for the African Americans. I think that this author is not an amazing novelist all together. I think she has written a book from her perspective, where she identifies herself with the main character, Skeeter, and sends this character on an adventure that she would have liked to be on herself. It is true though that in order to be a good writer you have to be able to identify with different types of characters, including the ones that are very different, like for instance a man writing about the life of a woman and actually capturing her feelings and her anguish so well that it seems written by that woman. Kathryn Stockett doesn't write that way. Her newer novel came out but it doesn't sound to have as good reviews as the first one. I didn't read it yet. Once I do, I will have a more informed opinion on whether she is a great novelist or not.

I do feel it is a book written from one point of view, that the subject was not researched sufficiently, and I do find that the characters are a bit stereotyped.

The southern housewives are portrait in a ridiculous light at their country club having a head of the cupcake comitee; that is just hilarious. Those women had nothing to do all day, literally nothing to do, because their maids raised and educated their children, cooked and cleaned, so what purpose in this whole world did these housewives had anyway, except finding interesting things to do like annoying the help or compete at which one is more able to convince her husband to pay for ridiculous expensive things. It looks like they were so bored with life that they had to pick at the people in a more vulnerable position, like an evil boss picks out at his employee who he knows will never quit the job because he needs it. Also, they were striving at the same time to appear high class, blue blooded like the British nobility, by having help in the home, dressing up and having social clubs that were exclusive with fancy parties. But the author describes very well how non blue blooded they were, but actual plain farmers' wives, by describing the men's sometimes dirty smelly outfits, and Skeeter's own family.

Some of the maids are portrayed like Scarlet's Mammie from Gone With the Wind. That is the image that came to my mind first when I started to read the book. Although I have seen some North and South documentaries and read some non-fiction on the same subject and since I know better I tried really hard to stray my mind from that image, but the book kept bringing me back to it. I think that what the book lacks is a strong African American accomplished character. At least one! I`m sure there were at that time. This book sends a very sad message most of the time that there is no hope for this community, that the evil white people are always going to win no matter what, and that they have no accomplished people, which I know is not true.

I can't help it but feel that although Skeeter is trying to do good and all she fails to get close to Minnie and Aibileen either because they are the help or because they are African American. It seems like she is doing more charity than anything else by giving them money and feeling sorry for their lives. She actually says at one point in the book that because she is white she feels compelled to help them financially. So, I don't think the characters are close enough, and that they were developing strong bonds of long lasting friendship. This is what I was expecting. Skeeter still feels alone even though there is potential at gaining better friends than her country club members. The book was intended to show the bonds between different women but I don't think the woman who wrote this story has captured those actual bonds.

I think there is a good message which says that the only way to change people is to start when they are small. Unknowingly, the housewives were giving the maids the power over the education of their children in many cases in this book. As a result some of the maids saw this as an opportunity to maybe change who the offspring of these people were going to become. I don`t know if this was the reality in the real world of the maids, but it is how it comes off from this novel.

It is true that in order to change the relationship between two parties, you need both of them to work at it and give in a little from their side. However, the people who try to create change in this book belong to both parties but do not come together enough, and don't stay together, and it seems that one party takes a much bigger risk than the other one. Think about a married couple for example. If only one spouse does all the effort to improve the marriage and the other one couldn't care less, it will never be enough, we all know that.

In conclusion, this book is fun and entertaining, but not extremely satisfactory to my literary needs. Leaving out much of the reality of the violence and discrimination that the African American community suffered at that time makes it a light read for many people who cannot stand descriptions of violence.

But don't mind me, I criticize everything to the bone... That was my take on it! Have fun reading.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars My New Favorite, Dec 20 2011
By 
0Clairebear0 (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
I'm always a little skeptical to read a book when everyone I know seems to 'love' it. I'm positive that I will be disappointed and that it won't live up to the hype. After much proscratinaton, I finally read 'The Help' and I'm kicking myself for not doing it sooner. I absolutely loved this book! The characters are so witty and full of personality. Their descriptions are so vivid, I felt like I knew them. I cheered for them, I felt awful for them and I hated Miss Hilly right along with them. The plot was near perfect, it had just the right amount of drama mixed with humour. I enjoyed getting to know Skeeter, Aibileen and Minny and seeing them develop over the course of the story.

This book definitely lives up to the hype, it is a must read. You won't be disappointed.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Great product!, Sep 17 2011
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
Although the book took longer than I had hoped to get to me (about 21 days), the book was in great shape. Looked brand new. Thanks!
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Help, July 29 2011
This review is from: The Help (Paperback)
The author did a fantastic job with this book. It keeps you interested from the beginning of the book until the last page. It will keep you laughing/giggling on every page with the humorous aspects between the "ladies" and their "help". The "help" was obviously not appreciated as much as they should have been back in those days. The author leaves the ending with an opening for a sequel to be written, which I hope that there is. Great read!! Can hardly wait to see the movie later this summer.
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The Help
The Help by Kathryn Stockett (Paperback - April 5 2011)
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