A memoir of Allison Glock's grandmother, a strange setup, but she manages to pull it off well. With scintillating and imaginative prose, Glock tells the story of Aneita Jean Blair, who grew up in Chester, West Virginia. Her family was working class, her dad, Andrew, worked as potter in a factory. Chester is a small town in the Ohio River Valley. Edna, the mom, was a homemaker. They had five children. Aneita Jean liked movies and dreamed of being the next Betty Davis. Born in 1920, Jean grew into an attractive teen. Boys wanted to date her when she went through puberty. She became shapely, built like "Miss America," she described herself. There's a valuable section of the book in which Glock gives a history of the Ohio River Valley, its economy, culture and demographics. The Klu Klux Klan was powerful there in the 1920s, and Andrew sympathized with them. He had his daughter Jean entertain the masked men at meetings, singing and dancing. Jean hated this.
Aneita Jean turned out to be a complex and unconventional woman. She had strengths and flaws. This is not a hagiography. Glock covers the Great Depression, WWII, and the 1950s. There's a lot insight in small town life in Appalachia.