PRO CONNECT
Jennie Helderman is an Alabama-born-and-bred writer transplanted to Atlanta in her gray-haired years. She entered Alabama politics as a pre-schooler, campaigning for her dad; broke a glass ceiling at age ten as the first girl to page in the Alabama legislature, the same year she wrote and produced her first play.
Since then she's authored four books, chaired the editorial committee for a 150,000 circulation quarterly, and written magazine articles and short stories. Her shortest story was nominated for the Pushcart Prize for 2007. Her profile of the Sandy Hook teacher who hid her 15 first graders in a bathroom took top national honors.
Jennie taught school in rural Alabama, did social work, led community projects and promoted women's issues. For six years she chaired the board which oversees Alabama's DHR, the largest state agency with a $1.6 billion budget.
She’s climbed Mt. Vesuvius, worked at Pompeii, hiked across Spain and rafted the Grand Canyon. If she doesn't learn to write faster, she'll never tell all the stories crawling through her memory.
“...the humanity and McNeil's indomitable spirit shine through.”
– Kirkus Reviews
Helderman chronicles a woman’s journey from battered wife to advocate for victims of spousal abuse in this nonfiction work.
Two quotes set the stage for this well-researched narrative that puts a human face on an all-too-common issue. The first comes from Ginger McNeil, who tells the author, “I lived in a cabin in the woods, too poor to afford electricity, and too afraid of my husband to leave.” The second comes from Ginger’s husband, Mike, who, matter-of-factly and without remorse, comments: “One time I hauled off and slapped the fool out of her….Men will understand….I wouldn’t change a thing if I could go back.” Hearing these words, the author, then on assignment to write a magazine piece about poverty in Alabama, switched her focus to McNeil and her story. In this book, she reports with a journalist’s keen eye and ear for the telling detail and quote: “I noticed her when she came in the door,” says a county clerk worker, recalling Ginger years later. “She looked broken down, like an old hollow-eyed woman in a faded cotton print dress. I could see she was frightened to death.” The author notes that the family lived remotely, like pioneers or survivalists; “He chose this way of life for us,” McNeil explains. In Helderman’s telling, McNeil’s fraught exit from her marriage (a scene in which her husband shows up at a court hearing and hands her a picture of their dead son, a suicide victim, is chilling) feels like a hard-won triumph. The author does give Mike—now deceased—the opportunity to tell his side (“It wasn’t all bad. Ginger and me”). Though those encounters thrum with the tension of possible threats to her own safety, she does an admirable job of presenting his perspective without resorting to “gotcha” questions. But the narrative is rooted in McNeil’s bravery and her determination to tell her story as repayment to the women’s shelter workers who aided her. This is an updated version of Helderman’s award-winning 2010 book.
At times a difficult read, but the humanity and McNeil’s indomitable spirit shine through.
Pub Date: May 2, 2023
ISBN: 9781950495337
Page count: 380pp
Publisher: Lucid House Publishing LLC
Review Posted Online: May 30, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2023
© Copyright 2024 Kirkus Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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