Be prepared to meet three unforgettable women:
Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter has just returned home after graduating from Ole Miss. She may have a degree, but it is 1962, Mississippi, and her mother will not be happy till Skeeter has a ring on her finger. Skeeter would normally find solace with her beloved maid Constantine, the woman who raised her, but Constantine has disappeared and no one will tell Skeeter where she has gone.
Aibileen is a black maid, a wise, regal woman raising her seventeenth white child. Something has shifted inside her after the loss of her own son, who died while his bosses looked the other way. She is devoted to the little girl she looks after, though she knows both their hearts may be broken.
Minny, Aibileen's best friend, is short, fat, and perhaps the sassiest woman in Mississippi. She can cook like nobody's business, but she can't mind her tongue, so she's lost yet another job. Minny finally finds a position working for someone too new to town to know her reputation. But her new boss has secrets of her own.
Seemingly as different from one another as can be, these women will nonetheless come together for a clandestine project that will put them all at risk. And why? Because they are suffocating within the lines that define their town and their times. And sometimes lines are made to be crossed.
In pitch-perfect voices, Kathryn Stockett creates three extraordinary women whose determination to start a movement of their own forever changes a town, and the way women—mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends—view one another. A deeply moving novel filled with poignancy, humor, and hope, The Help is a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don't.
Two days later, I sit in my parent's kitchen, waiting for dusk to fall. I
give in and light another cigarette even though last night the surgeon
general came on the television set and shook his finger at everybody,
trying to convince us that smoking will kill us. But Mother once told
me tongue kissing would turn me blind and I'm starting to think it's
all just a big plot between the surgeon general and Mother to make sure
no one ever has any fun.
At eight o'clock that same night, I'm
stumbling down Aibileen's street as discreetly as one can carrying a
fifty-pound Corona typewriter. I knock softly, already dying for
another cigarette to calm my nerves. Aibileen answers and I slip
inside. She's wearing the same green dress and stiff black shoes as
last time.
I try to smile, like I'm confident it will work
this time, despite the idea she explained over the phone. "Could we…sit in the kitchen this time?" I ask. "Would you mind?"
"Alright. Ain't nothing to look at, but come on back."
The kitchen is about half the size of the living room and warmer. It smells
like tea and lemons. The black-and-white linoleum floor has been
scrubbed thin. There's just enough counter for the china tea set. I set
the typewriter on a scratched red table under the window. Aibileen
starts to pour the hot water into the teapot.
"Oh, none
for me, thanks," I say and reach in my bag. "I brought us some Co-Colas
if you want one." I've tried to come up with ways to make Aibileen more
comfortable. Number One: Don't make Aibileen feel like she has to serve
me.
"Well, ain't that nice. I usually don't take my tea till
later anyway." She brings over an opener and two glasses. I drink mine
straight from the bottle and seeing this, she pushes the glasses aside,
does the same.
I called Aibileen after Elizabeth gave me the
note, and listened hopefully as Aibileen told me her ideafor her to
write her own words down and then show me what she's written. I tried
to act excited. But I know I'll have to rewrite everything she's
written, wasting even more time. I thought it might make it easier if
she could see it in type-face instead of me reading it and telling her
it can't work this way.
We smile at each other. I take a sip of my Coke, smooth my blouse. "So…" I say.
Aibileen has a wire-ringed notebook in front of her. "Want me to…just go head and read?"
"Sure," I say.
We both take deep breaths and she begins reading in a slow, steady voice.
"My
first white baby to ever look after was named Alton Carrington Speers.
It was 1924 and I'd just turned fifteen years old. Alton was a long,
skinny baby with hair fine as silk on a corn…"
I begin typing as she reads, her words rhythmic, pronounced more clearly than
her usual talk. "Every window in that filthy house was painted shut on
the inside, even though the house was big with a wide green lawn. I
knew the air was bad, felt sick myself…"
"Hang on," I say. I've typed wide greem. I blow on the typing fluid, retype it. "Okay, go ahead."
"When the mama died, six months later," she reads, "of the lung disease, they
kept me on to raise Alton until they moved away to Memphis. I loved
that baby and he loved me and that's when I knew I was good at making
children feel proud of themselves…"
I hadn't wanted to
insult Aibileen when she told me her idea. I tried to urge her out of
it, over the phone. "Writing isn't that easy. And you wouldn't have
time for this anyway, Aibileen, not with a full-time job."
"Can't be much different than writing my prayers every night."
It was the first interesting thing she'd told me about herself since we'd
started the project, so I'd grabbed the shopping pad in the pantry.
"You don't say your prayers, then?"
"I never told nobody that before. Not even Minny. Find I can get my point across a lot better writing em down."
"So
this is what you do on the weekends?" I asked. "In your spare time?" I
liked the idea of capturing her life outside of work, when she wasn't
under the eye of Elizabeth Leefolt.
"Oh no, I write a hour, sometimes two ever day. Lot a ailing, sick peoples in this town."
I was impressed. That was more than I wrote on some days. I told her we'd try it just to get the project going again.
Aibileen takes a breath, a swallow of Coke, and reads on.
She
backtracks to her first job at thirteen, cleaning the Francis the First
silver service at the governor's mansion. She reads how on her first
morning, she made a mistake on the chart where you filled in the number
of pieces so they'd know you hadn't stolen anything.
"I come
home that morning, after I been fired, and stood outside my house with
my new work shoes on. The shoes my mama paid a month's worth a light
bill for. I guess that's when I understood what shame was and the color
of it too. Shame ain't black, like dirt, like I always thought it was.
Shame be the color of a new white uniform your mother ironed all night
to pay for, white without a smudge or a speck a work-dirt on it."
Aibileen
looks up to see what I think. I stop typing. I'd expected the stories
to be sweet, glossy. I realize I might be getting more than I'd
bargained for. She reads on.
"…so I go on and get the
chiffarobe straightened out and before I know it, that little white boy
done cut his fingers clean off in that window fan I asked her to take
out ten times. I never seen that much red come out a person and I grab
the boy, I grab them four fingers. Tote him to the colored hospital
cause I didn't know where the white one was. But when I got there, a
colored man stop me and say, Is this boy white?" The typewriter
keys are clacking like hail on a roof. Aibileen is reading faster and I
am ignoring my mistakes, stopping her only to put in another page.
Every eight seconds, I fling the carriage aside.
"And I says Yessuh, and he say, Is them his white fingers? And I say, Yessuh, and he say, Well you better tell them he your high yellow cause that colored doctor won't operate on a white boy in a Negro hospital. And then a white policeman grab me and he say, Now you look a here"
She stops. Looks up. The clacking ceases.
"What? The policeman said look a here what?"
"Well, that's all I put down. Had to catch the bus for work this morning."
I hit the return and the typewriter dings. Aibileen and I look each other straight in the eye. I think this might actually work.
Chapter 12
Every
other night for the next two weeks, I tell Mother I'm off to feed the
hungry at the Canton Presbyterian Church, where we, fortunately, know
not a soul. Of course she'd rather I go down to the First Presbyterian,
but Mother's not one to argue with Christian works and she nods
approvingly, tells me on the side to make sure I wash my hands
thoroughly with soap afterward.
Hour after hour, in
Aibileen's kitchen, she reads her writing and I type, the details
thickening, the babies' faces sliding into focus. At first, I'm
disappointed that Aibileen is doing most of the writing, with me just
editing. But if Missus Stein likes it, I'll be writing the other maids'
stories and that will be more than enough work. If she likes it… I find myself saying this over and over in my head, hoping it might make it so.
Aibileen's writing is clear, honest. I tell her so.
"Well, look who I been writing to." She chuckles. "Can't lie to God."
Before
I was born, she actually picked cotton for a week at Longleaf, my own
family's farm. Once she lapses into talking about Constantine without
my even asking.
"Law, that Constantine could sing. Like a
purebred angel standing in the front a the church. Give everbody
chills, listening to that silky voice a hers and when she wouldn't sing
no more after she had to give her baby to" She stops. Looks at me.
She says, "Anyway."
I
tell myself not to press her. I wish I could hear everything she knows
about Constantine, but I'll wait until we've finished her interviews. I
don't want to put anything between us now.
"Any word from
Minny yet?" I ask. "If Missus Stein likes it," I say, practically
chanting the familiar words, "I just want to have the next interview
set up and ready."
Aibileen shakes her head. "I asked Minny three times and she still say she ain't gone do it. I spec it's time I believed her."
I
try not to show my worry. "Maybe you could ask some others? See if
they're interested?" I am positive that Aibileen would have better luck
convincing someone than I would.
Aibileen nods. "I got some more I can ask. But how long you think it's gone take for this lady to tell you if she like it?"
I shrug. "I don't know. If we mail it next week, maybe we'll hear from
her by mid-February. But I can't say for sure." Aibileen presses her
lips together, looks down at her pages. I see something that I haven't
noticed before. Anticipation, a glint of excitement. I've been so
wrapped up in my own self, it hasn't occurred to me that Aibileen might
be as thrilled as I am that an editor in New York is going to read her
story. I smile and take a deep breath, my hope growing stronger.
On our fifth session, Aibileen reads to me about the day Treelore died.
She reads about how his broken body was thrown on the back of a pickup
by the white foreman. "And then they dropped him off at the colored
hospital. That's what the nurse told me, who was standing outside. They
rolled him off the truck bed and the white men drove away." Aibileen
doesn't cry, just lets a parcel of time pass while I stare at the
typewriter, she at the worn black tiles.
On the sixth session,
Aibileen says, "I went to work for Miss Leefolt in 1960. When Mae
Mobley two weeks old," and I feel I've passed through a leaden gate of
confidence. She describes the building of the garage bathroom, admits
she is glad it is there now. It's easier than listening to Hilly
complain about sharing a toilet with the maid. She tells me that I once
commented that colored people attend too much church. That stuck with
her. I cringe, wondering what else I've said, never suspecting the help
was listening or cared.
One night she says, "I was thinking…" But then she stops.
I look up from the typewriter, wait. It took Aibileen vomiting on herself for me to learn to let her take her time.
"I's thinking I ought to do some reading. Might help me with my own writing."
"Go down to the State Street Library. They have a whole room full of Southern writers. Faulkner, Eudora Welty"
Aibileen gives me a dry cough. "You know colored folks ain't allowed in that library."
I
sit there a second, feeling stupid. "I can't believe I forgot that."
The colored library must be pretty bad. There was a sit-in at the
white library a few years ago and it made the papers. When the colored
crowd showed up for the sit-in trial, the police department simply
stepped back and turned the German shepherds loose. I look at Aibileen
and am reminded, once again, the risk she's taking talking to me. "I'll
be glad to pick the books up for you," I say.
Aibileen hurries to the bedroom and comes back with a list. "I better mark the
ones I want first. I been on the waiting list for To Kill a Mockingbird at the Carver Library near bout three months now. Less see…"
I watch as she puts checkmarks next to the books: The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois, poems by Emily Dickinson (any), The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
"I read some a that back in school, but I didn't get to finish." She keeps marking, stopping to think which one she wants next.
"You want a book by…Sigmund Freud?"
"Oh,
people crazy." She nods. "I love reading about how the head work. You
ever dream you fall in a lake? He say you dreaming about your own self
being born. Miss Frances, who I work for in 1957, she had all them
books."
On her twelfth title, I have to know. "Aibileen, how
long have you been wanting to ask me this? If I'd check these books out
for you?"
"A while." She shrugs. "I guess I's afraid to mention it."
"Did you…think I'd say no?"
"These is white rules. I don't know which ones you following and which ones you ain't."
We look at each other a second. "I'm tired of the rules," I say.
Aibileen chuckles and looks out the window. I realize how thin this revelation must sound to her.
“The Help by Kathryn Stockett is a story that made me weep as I rejoiced for each of humanity’s small but steady triumphs over hate and fear. I will never forget this wonderful book.”
—Dorothea Benton Frank
“A magical novel. Heartbreaking and oh so true, the voices of these characters, their lives and struggles will stay with you long after you reluctantly come to the end.”
—Robert Hicks, New York Times– bestselling author of The Widow of the South
“I love The Help. Kathryn Stockett has given us glorious characters and a powerful, truth-filled story. Abilene, Minny and Skeeter, show that people from this troubled time came together despite their differences and that ordinary women can be heroic.”
—Jill Conner Browne, #1 New York Times Bestselling Author of The Sweet Potato Queens series and resident of Jackson, MS
“Set in the rural South of the 1960's, THE HELP is a startling, resonant portrait of the intertwined lives of women on opposite sides of the racial divide. Stockett's many gifts – a keen eye for character, a wicked sense of humor, the perfect timing of a natural born storyteller – shine as she evokes a time and place when black women were expected to help raise white babies, and yet could not use the same bathroom as their employers. Her characters, both white and black, are so fully fleshed they practically breathe – no stock villains or pious heroines here. I'm becoming an evangelist for The Help. Don't miss this wise and astonishing debut.”
–Joshilyn Jackson, Bestselling author of Gods in Alabama
“A wonderful book. A compelling and comically poignant tale about three women, and a time and a place that is in many ways very much still with us.”
—Beth Henley, Pulitzer Prize– winning playwright of Crimes of the Heart
“Lush, original, and poignant, Kathryn Stockett has written a wondrous novel. You will be swept away as they work, play, and love during a time when possibilities for women were few but their dreams of the future were limitless. A glorious read.”
—Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of the Big Stone Gap series and Lucia, Lucia
“Full of heart and history, this one has bestseller written all over it.”
— PW starred review
“This heartbreaking story is a stunning debut from a gifted talent.”
— Atlanta Journal
“It's 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. When folks at your book club wonder what to read next month, go on and pitch this wholly satisfying novel with confidence. A-“
— Entertainment Weekly
"[A] wise, poignant novel...You'll catch yourself cheering out loud."
—People Magazine (3.5 out of 4 stars)
"[A] story with heart and hope...A good old fashioned novel"
—New York Daily News
"This book was sitting on my desk and everyone kept coming in and when they’d see it they’d gush about it, “I love this book”. So I brought it home and it didn’t disappoint. It’s very much a book like you would imagine Oprah would pick for her book club. Set in the early sixties, it’s about female friendship and race relations and it’s heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time.”
—John Searles, The Today Show