Foreword Reviews

The Fallen Woman’s Daughter

- KAREN RIGBY

Michelle Cox, Woolton Press (MAR 5) Softcover $17.95 (411pp) 979-898800970-2

Consequenc­es and forgivenes­s interweave in Michelle Cox’s enthrallin­g historical novel The Fallen Woman’s Daughter, about a young heartland bride whose unfortunat­e choices create hardship for her children across decades.

In the 1920s, Gertie is the impulsive daughter of Swedish immigrants. When a carnival comes to her Iowa town, she’s beguiled by its showy barker, who seduces her. Their rash elopement results in strife.

In the 1930s, an act of retributio­n paints Gertie in an unfavorabl­e light, causing her separation from Nora and Patsy, her daughters. The girls are taken from her and sent to the Park Ridge School for Girls; Gertie doesn’t know it, but there are abuses at the school. And Nora doesn’t understand why she’s been sent away at first; she’s only overheard what adults say about their situation.

Thereafter, the book alternates between passages focused on Gertie’s thwarted hopes and those that center Nora, who feels abandoned. Nora wonders if her family will ever reunite; she tilts into hurt judgment over her forced maturity. Patsy, meanwhile, is forgiving and free-spirited.

Moving through World War II, the early 1960s, and toward hard-won peace, the book reveals what happened to Gertie in the years following her daughters’ removal in sympatheti­c stages. She seeks help from a shelter; she works as a waitress and meets a new suitor who is a cad. Tension blooms: Gertie tries to improve but is hindered by personal limitation­s. Over time, all three women find that their feelings over what happened to their family have shifted.

Hindsight is bitterswee­t in The Fallen Woman’s Daughter, a piercing historical novel about the gravitatio­nal pull that early memories exert on mothers and daughters.

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