Necessary Lies
2013 • 368 pages

Ratings2

Average rating4

15

This book was worth every minute I spent reading it. I don't want to give away any spoilers, but the basic premise is that a woman in 1960 becomes a social worker as she feels called to help those less fortunate. She discovers that there are departmental/state/office rules that make life-altering choices for those in their purview, but this woman sees real people when she interacts with them, and by seeing them as people she feels at odds with the rules. What follows is a story with many twists and turns, some I saw coming, and some surprised me. The consistent feeling I had reading this book was anger and hope. Anger that these events happened, at what life was like for women in 1960, that poor people could be seen as non-people, and at the racial ‘rules' of the time. Hope that people with good hearts and clear eyes can make a difference, hope that things are somewhat, sometimes better today. So many layers and subjects are laid bare here there is much to discuss, and I am looking forward to our book club discussion. I was left questioning myself - why would I want people to read a book that made me so mad? I remembered the quote by George Santayana - “Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it.” Does this book apply today? To how people view others in different socioeconomic classes or that look different or worship differently? Those discussions are worth having, and that's why this book is worth your time.

March 3, 2019Report this review