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ACROSS THE OCEAN WILD by Kathleen McCann

ACROSS THE OCEAN WILD

by Kathleen McCann

Pub Date: Oct. 26th, 2022
ISBN: 9780578273464
Publisher: Hazel Wand Publishing

A historical novel follows the early life of an Irish girl who immigrates with her family to New York City.

In 1889, 7-year-old Rose O’Brien travels to Dublin and steps aboard the Furnessia steamship, bound for a future that promises new opportunities. Her father, Charles, has already made the trip, and now she, her mother, and her three younger brothers are about to join him in New York. Charles meets them at the Castle Garden immigration center—Ellis Island will not open until 1892—and brings them to a Manhattan tenement apartment in Hell’s Kitchen. The family rejoices in the reunion, and Rose begins to make friends with the ethnically and nationally diverse immigrant kids in the area. (Her “building was filled with children of all ages….They tumbled down the stairs and sat on the stoop.”) Rose meets young Anthony Vigliano, who lives in her building and will become pivotal in her life. Then, just a few months after the O’Briens’ arrival, the “Russian Flu” brings tragedy to the family when Rose’s mother succumbs to the raging virus. Fortunately, Jenny Himmelfarb, a woman working with the outreach program run by the Neighborhood Guild, comes into their lives and arranges for Rose and her eldest brother, Maurice, to register for public school. Himmelfarb’s continued involvement with the family opens the door to the children’s integration into American life. McCann’s gentle novel is narrated by Rose in a charming and optimistic voice supporting women’s equality that carries a tinge of Hallmark gloss in the descriptions of the opportunities offered and successes achieved by the immigrant kids in her circle. The narrative moves pleasantly and episodically through a decade and a half of Rose’s growth into womanhood. Although light in significant dramatic tension, the tale richly overflows with everyday details of turn-of-the-20th-century life in New York, including the social and political movements of the period. And despite Rose’s commitment to becoming a nurse—which, according to the standards of the day, means remaining single and chaste—her budding romance with Anthony keeps the story intriguing.

An enjoyable read with a strong protagonist and a trove of historical nuggets.