I thought the book started off surprisingly slowly. I thought it did quickly get rolling and was very suspenseful.
In this classic women's fiction tale of a white woman and two African-American maids, set in 1960s era Jackson, Mississippi, the suspense comes not just from not knowing the outcome of the story but from understanding the very real danger in which these characters are placed by their actions. I think that's definitely part of the appeal: it's a social satire, an adventure story, a family story, and a town saga (many characters), all wrapped into one.
The book opens with Aibileen, a black maid, getting ready to start work at a new job. For three months, she's been grieving the loss of her adult son, and she hasn't been working.
Her son was a physically slight and bookish man, who worked at manual labor. Aibileen feels that his fatal accident at work occurred because her son was not physically strong enough for the job he had.
She feels bitter, and she feels conflicted about going to work for another white family.
Before he died, he started work on a book about what it was like to work for white people.
Aibileen mentions this to Skeeter, a young woman who has just returned from college (without that "Mrs. Degree"). Coincidentally, Skeeter's applied for a job at a New York publishing house and while she didn't get the job, an editor there advised her that she should write something. It occurs to Skeeter that she should write about the black maids in her world and their experiences working for white people.
Minny is a friend of Aibileen and she also works as a maid for a white lady. The daughter of her employer decides that her mother should be moved to a rest home, ending Minny's employment. Hilarious hijinks ensue. Actually, this occasions a crisis in Minny's life as she really needs that job. Minny is a plain-spoken person who has a reputation for speaking her mind regardless of the consequences.
She eventually gets a job with a young white woman who is struggling with several aspects of married life. This aspect of Minny's story has many comic and heart-warming elements.
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