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Paperback The Dollmaker Book

ISBN: 0060529342

ISBN13: 9780060529345

The Dollmaker

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

The Dollmaker was originally published in 1954 to immediate success and critical acclaim. In unadorned and powerful prose, Harriette Arnow tells the unforgettable and heartbreaking story of the Nevels... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Real for Me

Having grown up in rural Kentucky 'The Dollmaker' was far too real for me. Gertie is a real character, she is the typical strong and determined woman of the mountains. It is almost repulsive that she has to be paired with a man who is a weak and spineless character. Despite it all she was able to create beauty, honor her husband and children and to have dreams in all the despair. Her life is typical for so many women of rural Appalachia from that time. I would say that one who has to see the movie to critique the book needs to remember that a movie is rarely as worthy as the book. Either read the book or see the movie, most often I choose to do the former. Why let a movie ruin a good book!Stands out in my mind as one of the all time best reads, comprable to "The Good Earth" by Pearl S. Buck!

A painful, shattering tragedy, beautifully written

This is a haunting story. In it, a unique woman with clear and powerful dreams and goals, betrays her self by listening to the advice of the average folk who surround her. In following their advice, she forever loses her chance of attaining her own dreams, and also betrays and loses 2 of her children - one of whom returns to the land they left, one of whom, tragically, dies. This is one of the most painful books I have ever read. At the beginning of the book, Gertie is portrayed as nearly superhumanly powerful in her determined success in saving her youngest child's life. Then Gertie forces herself to give up her lifelong dream of owning her own farm - when it is almost within her grasp! - to follow her husband into the ugly heap of industrial Chicago in the name of the war. She does this because she is convinced by vast numbers of average folk that it is the RIGHT thing to do. She convinces herself that her private dreams are mere selfishness, and that she should sacrifice them to "follow her man".Echoing the same mistake again later, she bows again to popular opinion, and banishes her most beloved and unique child's imaginary playmate. As an indirect result, her daughter dies. Fleeing to play alone - where none can hear/watch her with her imaginary playmate - she has a horrific accident in the train yard, and dies nightmarishly in her mother's arms. And yet, Gertie does not see that these betrayals of all that is most unique, sensitive, and artistic at her core is evil. Instead, she continues to see it as self-scrificing, when she is killing the best self she could be and sinking into the dross around her. Symbolically, at the very last, she gives up her beautiful cherrywood carving of Christ to be cut up to make mass-produced dolls; her final betrayal. Ah, no wonder she could never see his face!This story will never leave me. In many ways, I wish it would. But it teaches a hard lesson; that to be true to anything, one must be true to oneself. To a religious reader, it truly brings home the lesson of the parable of the talents. One must not misuse or waste the gifts of talent given by the creator. But, oh, poor Gertie!

Arnow opens our eyes to the past and humans within it.

The Dollmaker was a beautifully written book. Once I started to read it I could not put it down. It is about the life of a woman during World War II, who under certain circumstances regarding her husband, is obliged to move her family from Kentucky to Detroit. The change that Gertie, the mother, is forced to undergo and adapt to is evident through the course of the novel. Arnow opens our eyes to life during this period for many people like Gertie. People, with "big" dreams, go to work in war factories that over work them and place them in dangerous conditions. Because money made is necessary for payments, food, or other foolish neccessities, families are forced to live each day as it comes. This view of society during this period was new to me. I had never realized the adjustments, cultural shocks, and advantages people could take of others during this time, or during a war. Arnow tells the events that take place in Gertie's life so well. The images she creates our realistic. She doesn't try to make a romance or happy-go-lucky ending out of the book. She tells about Gertie's sufferings as they are. Her book is more like a historical documentary, except we get to experience, emotionally, what the characters do. Some would argue that this book is too depressing, but Arnow wanted us to realize that life can be like this some times. There is no cruelness or situation that occurs to Gertie or others in this book that we don't see in our own lives or could empathize with. I felt emotionally and mentally as drawn to this book as I did to The Grapes of Wrath. I saw the same spirit of human survival and courage in both books. The Dollmaker gives an inside look into what changes in surroundings can do to a family. Just as in The Grapes of Wrath, we see the gradual deterioation in the family structure. This was sad, but truthful. You have to read this novel to understand or feel what I mean in describing it. If your realistic and perceptive, you'll enjoy this novel. It will be mind boggling at times. I recommend you have a box of tissues at your side before beginning. In any case, after reading The Dollmaker you'll certainly be more open minded and sympathtic towards others' sufferings and realize that you and I have it easy.
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