3.5 Stars
The Barbizon of 1952 groomed young women who were living away from home – the ever-watchful eyes of parents were replaced with a housemother’s watchful eyes, looking after all of the girls. Not just their safety, but how they would present themselves every day, eventually present themselves to the world, in a fashionably, socially acceptable, manner. Maybe most went there to find a suitable entrance into a society where they could find a suitable husband, but there were others who went to find another life. Some went in with one ideal, and left with another.
“The Barbizon Hotel for Women, packed to the rafters with pretty little dolls. Just like you.”
It was a combination of a charm school / finishing school and girls’ dormitory, but it also had its own charms. Like Tiffany’s, the name implies the best of quality. It exuded glamour, class, promoting itself as an institution that attracted a “certain kind of lady.” Dress codes were enforced; residents were not allowed to leave the building in less than acceptable attire. In early 1950 this meant no pants, no exceptions. Among its list of to-be-discovered “dolls” include Sylvia Plath, Joan Crawford, Ali McGraw, Grace Kelly, Cybil Shepherd, Candice Bergen, Cloris Leachman, Gene Tierney, Peggy Cass, Jaclyn Smith, Dorothy McGuire, Eudora Welty, Joan Didion, Ann Beattie, Molly Brown, the unsinkable, died there in 1932. The Ford modeling agency placed their models there, the Katherine Gibbs Secretarial School placed their future secretaries there, safely supervised. An induction and introduction to their future life.
In 1952, the novel centers on Darby McLaughlin, who is a Katie Gibbs student, and Esme, a Barbizon maid. Darby is from Ohio and has never experienced anything like NYC, and Esme has lived and breathed the streets since she arrived as a child from Puerto Rico. Esme introduces Darby to a life outside her comprehension, seedy jazz clubs, each step outside Darby’s comfort zone. It’s dark, it’s scary, but it also has its own magic. The music, the way it makes her feel.
In 2016, Rose, a journalist, is looking for a story, happens to be staying in one of the apartments in the now renovated Barbizon – no longer just a haven for young women, it is now a modernized condominium. Rose’s life has just been turned upside down several times, and feeling like she’s just been tossed around inside a snow globe, her gaze lands on one of the women of the “old” Barbizon, still there, grandfathered in by New York’s rent laws. She wears a hat with a net veil down across her face, and Rose is seized by a need to know more about her. About the few women who stayed, who found a life there that didn’t include the then standard husband and 2.5 children. But how to convince these women to share their stories? She’s particularly eager to speak with the veiled woman– Darby McLaughlin – who seems just as eager to avoid her. But Darby’s story is one she feels drawn to; she knows there’s more to the story than the papers wrote about back then.
The characters are mostly entertaining, if occasionally trite, predictable. Most of this story it is compelling. At a point where, in most stories, I would feel more invested, it began to drag a little. Where it had once seemed to flow effortlessly, even with some rather hard to believe segments, it began to feel slightly forced. Some characters, some sections could have been removed completely, or their storyline ended earlier – for me.
Rose’s ethics seem fairly high, so it was noticeable when they change to somewhat questionable, but then again I really enjoyed the things she discovered, I felt that if they needed to have been added to the story when they were. A dilemma.
Overall, this is an enjoyable read. It’s a fun look at another era, another way of life. It was perhaps a bit more entertaining to me as my mother lived in a similar set-up as a young “Air Hostess” for PCA Airlines. The photos I have of them sitting around their room in curlers, or around the piano singing are priceless.
Pub Date: 23 August 2016
Many thanks to Penguin Group/Dutton, NetGalley and author Fiona Davis for providing me with an advanced copy