Thank you, Partner @bibliolifestyle @williammorrowbooks for the review copy of Canary Girls by Jennifer Chiaverini.
Do you know if any women
in your family went to work during World War I or II to help in the war
effort? My Dad was recently telling me a
story about how my Great Grandma Godfrey went to work in a local factory and saved
the money to put indoor plumbing in their home at the end of the war.
Canary Girls is the story
of three women who worked during World War I in an ammunitions factory in London. April is a maid when she learns from her
friend about the higher wages and “more fun” that she can have by moving to London
to work in the ammunitions factories, so she takes her chance. Lucy is the wife of a famous football player,
Daniel, who has left to fight overseas. She
takes a job to supplement their income and help the war effort. Helen’s husband is the owner of the Thornshire
Arsenal where April and Lucy work. She
is appalled by the conditions and works to help the girls have better work
conditions. The women work with TNT and start
to appear yellow and have health problems. They are nicknamed the “canary
girls.” The canary girls also start
their own football team and play across the country.
I liked the three
different viewpoints in this novel by three very different women from very
different backgrounds. I enjoyed their
personal stories, but I was horrified by the women working with this very poisonous
substance and the health impacts. In the
author’s note, it’s stated that it is unknown how many women and men were
poisoned or injured due to this dangerous work in World War I.
I loved the women playing
football during World War I. It reminded
me of A League of their own, but with football (soccer) and in WWI instead of
WWII. I was sad to read in the author’s
note that women’s football was banned in 1921 in the UK. It wasn’t until 1971 that women were allowed
to play professionally in the UK.
I appreciate that author
Jennifer Chiaverini is able to weave together so many interesting pieces of
history into one fascinating story.
There is sadness and tragedy in this story, but I enjoyed that it ended
on a happy note.
I love that Jennifer
Chiaverini is a Wisconsin author based in Dane County which she also states in
the acknowledgements.
Favorite quote: “And for the grieving widows and sisters and
mothers, every shell was a blow for vengeance, smoldering and bitter and full
of anguish and spite.”
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