American Historical Fiction discussion

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The Jungle
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"The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair
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;)
Her future husband was born in Canada & immigrated here in 1925. He came down to work for a paper in Oyster Bay, one of several owned by the same man. My grandfather eventually worked his way up to become publisher & editor of one of the papers, The Long Islander, which was started by Walt Whitman.
Another grandfather was born just after his parents came over here in 1904 (I think) from Sweden. He was a union man, pipe fitters, I think. He grew up in Brooklyn. He used to tell a lot of stories about the unions & how they helped everyone. He was also a staunch Mason, but wouldn't say much about growing up in a cold water walk-up in Brooklyn except occasional comments.
He married a woman with a similar history, but she was German-Dutch. Even though I met my Dutch great-grandmother a few times, I never found out much about the family. Closed mouth bunch. My aunt was 60 before she found out she had an uncle that lived just a few miles away. That grandmother was a tough old bird. She shot her last deer when she was 84 years old after a 3 mile hike into the blueberry fields near her camp in Maine. She let her grandsons drag it home & dress it for her, though.
:)

My review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Thanks for this! Sounds like material for an American Historical to me.

A cousin has the family bible for the German engineer. I'm a woodworker, so I got all the remaining pieces of his save for one desk. There's a goat cart (too big for my goats), a bird carving, cane chair, book case, the high chair plus a stool he made for his son-in-law. I also have his claw hammer, pocket knife, & their old anniversary clock - a Sears clock they bought for an early wedding anniversary circa 1900, according to family legend. Nothing famous or worth a lick to anyone but me. I treasure it, though.
I told you I had a soft spot. It's also very cool figuring out how great grandpa designed & laid out his projects. Something about the stool kept me looking at it. Finally, I figured it out. It uses proportional geometric shapes. The top curves are ogees that are based on the circle sizes for the bottoms of the legs. I made a reconstruction & sold the article to a woodworking magazine. He was a smart old geezer.
:)


Agree completely about the last half I say in my review: The end of this book turns into a huge political ad for the socialist party so by then I just wanted it to be over!
For me this book was more of an immigrant story and there is tragedy after tragedy yet I feel everyone should read this book at least up till Sinclair goes into the politics and ruins the book. I enjoyed it more than I thought I would.
here is my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Yes we had very similar views on this one!


So far, I've found the ills of the meat packing industry to be very much a secondary issue for Sinclair. They're awful, but it's obvious that his first & foremost thought is the plight of honest, hard working immigrants. They arrive with stars in their eyes & are soon living in hell. He certainly found a proper setting.
I've always had a soft spot for immigrants. All of my ancestors, a grandfather & the rest of my great grandparents, immigrated to the US in the late 1800's & early 1900's, within decades of this novel's setting 1906. They all landed in NYC & eventually made their fortunes. Some managed to own their own homes out on Long Island, nothing grand, but solidly middle class. They had hard times in Brooklyn, but nothing like what Sinclair describes. The morass that his characters landed in is enough to make anyone with a heart weep.
The naivete & ignorance of the immigrants is compounded by the language barrier. Life was pretty brutal back then, but their lives were crushed by greed, a surplus of workers, lack of unions, decent medicine, & more. IOW, the sheer number of hardships that lines up against them is too long to list. The grinding weight of them is practically unbearable to read about.