Thank you to GoodReads and Harper Collins for an ARC to review.
Colleges in the US went coed as early as the 1830's but as The Secret Sisters depicts, even in the 1880's, female college students still found the path to higher education fraught with discrimination. Beth Carrington dares to pursue a medical degree at Whitsitt College. As the only female student in the physician’s program, she often finds herself singled out by her professors with disparaging comments about the strain of an education on a woman’s already fragile brain or their tendency towards hysteria. Beth longs for the camaraderie, she sees in the male fraternity, Iota Gamma. But secret organizations are prohibited and even to gather a group of like-minded girls is risking expulsion. She decides to seek help from the president of Iota Gamma, Grant Richardson, whose family has powerful influence at the college. Grant is against the idea of a female fraternity, but because he’s attracted to Beth, he agrees to help. However, breaking down barriers and long held traditions is seldom ever won without a battle. Naming themselves Beta Xi Beta, for equality and intellect, Beth and her fraternity sisters fight for recognition, while defying the rules and secretly meeting together.
I found this peek into campus life of the 19th century to be very interesting. I had never considered the challenges faced by these young women who pursued an education to be pioneers in their professions. In the male dominated halls of higher learning, they were met with stereotypical views and sexual harassment. The author gives us a very likable and tenacious heroine in Beth. The relationship between Beth and her “sisters” speaks volumes as to the bond that fraternities were meant to foster. Like with Joy’s debut novel, you feel well immersed in the time period and she always surprises you with a twist in the plot you don’t quite expect. I highly enjoyed this and found myself reading through it quickly to find out what would happen next.