Manhattan Beach
Jennifer Egan
Scribner
2017
Ms. Hen found this novel at the Little Free Library near
where she lives recently, and since she had read another novel by the author
and liked it, she picked this up. She immediately got swept away into another
time and place, but one that seemed familiar to her.
This novel is different from the last few novels Ms. Hen has
read in the way that it is long and winding, with lengthy chapters and complex
characters. This is a novel that is meant to be chewed slowly and digested
fully before the reader can fully understand what occurs.
MANHATTAN BEACH is about Anna, a young woman during the
Depression and World War II in New York. Her father disappears when she is
young, and nobody knows where he went. Her family suspects that he ran off, and
hopes he has not be killed. When the war starts, she gets a job at the Brooklyn
Navy Yard, and eventually works as the first female diver working underwater on
the ships. She meets Dexter Styles at a nightclub he owns, who she had met as a
child when her father took her to his house. She discovers what happened to
her father, but the plot twists and other events are discovered.
Ms. Hen thinks this novel captures the psychology of a time
that does not exist anymore. The way women were treated by the men was
despicable, and even though Ms. Hen knows that this is true to the past, she
can’t help being disgusted by it. The world used to be much worse than it is
now, especially for women and minorities. Anna works hard to prove herself to
the men who are her coworkers, but she gets in trouble, and has to deal with
her problem. She is crafty in the way that she handles her difficulty, which
proves she is a person with intelligence and wiles.
Ms. Hen thought this novel was personally appealing to her,
because it reminds her of her family history. During World War II, her
grandfather worked in the Navy Yard in Charlestown, Massachusetts, and she
imagines that world was similar to the one in the novel. Her grandfather didn’t
go to war because by then, he had too many children. Her father was also in the
Navy, so she has a connection to this sphere. The women who worked in the Navy
Yard in the novel were waiting for the men to come home, but at the same time,
they enjoyed themselves, and they made decent money. War changed things for the
people back then, because they all had the same goal, and they admired the men
who went off to fight.
This is not the type of novel that Ms. Hen usually reads. It’s
long and winding, and is a type of mystery or noir thriller. Even so, she
enjoyed it, and it’s a good book to read as the days are getting darker, and
filled with promise of a new life, or at least a different life.
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