The Help (Paperback)
| Author: Kathryn Stockett |
$10 off $30 on Home, Health & Beauty, Sporting Goods, Bags, Entertainment, Apparel, Jewelry, Toys and Pet Supplies when you use V.me at checkout. Ends 5/26/2013.
List Price:
$16.00
(Save 37%)
Today
$10.01
+ $3.35 SHIPPING
EARN 5x (51) RAKUTEN SUPER POINTSWhat's this?
| Format: | Paperback |
Click here for Kobo Edition (eBook). Available for $9.99! (What's this?)
Condition:
Brand New
In Stock:
Usually Ships within 24 hours
5x
Product Details:
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group USA
ISBN-10: 0425245136
ISBN-13: 9780425245132
Sku: 220960993
Publish Date: 6/28/2011
Dimensions:
(in Inches) 8.5H x 5.25L x 1.25T
Pages:
534
Age Range:
22 to UP
See more in Historical
| Limited and persecuted by racial divides in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, three women, including an African-American maid, her sassy and chronically unemployed friend and a recently graduated white woman, team up for a clandestine project against a backdrop of the budding civil rights era. Includes reading-group guide. Reissue. A #1 best-selling novel. *Author: Stockett, Kathryn *Publication Date: 2011/06/28 *Number of Pages: 534 *Binding Type: Paperback *Language: English *Depth: 1.25 *Width: 5.25 *Height: 8.50 |
|
From the Publisher:
Limited and persecuted by racial divides in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, three women, including an African-American maid, her sassy and chronically unemployed friend, and a recently graduated white woman, team up for a clandestine project. |
Annotation:
At the outset of the civil rights movement in Jackson, Mississippi, three unique women unite to share the stories of dozens of the city's black servants, who have been kept voiceless for too long. Skeeter is fresh home from college, with big dreams of becoming a journalist, though her mother just wants her to find a husband. Aibileen, a black maid, is the heart and soul of her household, now working on raising her seventeenth white child. Her best friend Minnie, is the best cook in the city, but can not find a job because of her tendency to speak the cold truth. Together, these three unforgettable ladies launch a crusade to collect the stories of the town's silent servants, and try to tear down the unspoken racial barriers that traverse the homes and hearts of everyone in Jackson.
At the outset of the civil rights movement in Jackson, Mississippi, three unique women unite to share the stories of dozens of the city's black servants, who have been kept voiceless for too long. Skeeter is fresh home from college, with big dreams of becoming a journalist, though her mother just wants her to find a husband. Aibileen, a black maid, is the heart and soul of her household, now working on raising her seventeenth white child. Her best friend Minnie, is the best cook in the city, but can not find a job because of her tendency to speak the cold truth. Together, these three unforgettable ladies launch a crusade to collect the stories of the town's silent servants, and try to tear down the unspoken racial barriers that traverse the homes and hearts of everyone in Jackson.
Author Bio
Kathryn Stockett
Kathryn Stockett burst onto the literary scene in 2009 with her debut novel, THE HELP, about a group of black maids working in Mississippi on the cusp of the Civil Rights era. While the book has stirred some controversy, it has spent months at a time on various best-seller lists, sometimes in the number-one spot.||Stockett was born in Jackson, Mississippi in 1969. Her father was a successful local businessman. She fondly remembers her family's housekeeper, Demetrie. She has said, "[A]s much as we loved Demetrie, she had a separate bathroom located on the outside of the house. I never once sat down to eat with her at the table. . . . I am ashamed to admit that it took me 20 years to realize the irony of that relationship."||After graduating from the University of Alabama, Stockett moved to New York City, where she held various jobs in marketing and magazine publishing. It took her five years to complete the manuscript for THE HELP, which was rejected by more than 50 agents and publishers before finally being accepted.||Although some critics expressed concern that Stockett was ill suited to write from the point of view of her black characters, readers found those characters compelling and their dialogue convincing; the book sold more than a million copies in its first year of release alone. It was adapted for the big screen in 2011 by filmmaker Tate Taylor, a childhood friend of Stockett's, and garnered several Academy Award nominations, including one for best picture. (Octavia Spencer took home an Oscar as best supporting actress for her role as the maid Minny.)||Responding to her critics, Stockett told an interviewer, "On the one hand I [do] wonder, was this really my story to tell? On the other hand, I just wanted the story to be told."
Praise
"Kathryn Stockett['s]...first novel is a nuanced variation on the theme that strikes every note with authenticity. In a page-turner that brings new resonance to the moral issues involved, she spins a story of social awakening as seen from both sides of the American racial divide."
- Sybil Steinberg
04/01/2009
"[THE HELP] is graceful and real, a compulsively readable story of three women who watch the Mississippi ground shifting beneath their feet as the words of men like Martin Luther King Jr. and Bob Dylan pervade their genteel town."
- Karen Valby
02/20/2009

Related Products














