Carnegie's Maid

Carnegie's Maid

2018 • 283 pages

Ratings4

Average rating3.5

15

I've been dreading writing this review since page 50, when I realized I really did not like this book. But I hung in there hoping for....landmarks, maybe?

Some background, I'm going to Pittsburgh in June and wanted to read something that took place historically in Pittsburgh. I was put off by the cover, but ordered it in anyway. Just note that I love historical fiction, know a bit about Andrew Carnegie, and what I wanted was a sense of what it was like to be alive, in Pittsburgh, at that point in time.

At it's center, this book is an extremely lame romance novel. It tries to touch on too many things: the immigrant experience, Reconstruction, the different levels of the upper elite in the big cities and the idea that investing in the ground floor of a company is smart business. All of these things are introduced, but they are NOT explored and therefore it fails on every subject.
All I learned from this novel was that Pittsburgh was sooty. This novel could have taken place ANYWHERE. Andrew Carnegie is totally without character, cowering to his mother's whims. We meet some of his business partners, briefly, but not Frick? We meet Clara's cousins in Pittsburgh and I thought for sure! We are getting to the strike now! But, nah.
The Homestead strike is briefly mentioned in the epilogue.
Just so disappointing. Also, I started counting the number of times Benedict reports Clara is mending and darning stockings. Answer=way too many.
I'm a little surprised my library has this as a book club darling.

April 15, 2021Report this review