
Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher
Ruby is a poor girl, living in a poor neighbourhood of Chicago. She works at a meat packing factory to support her arthritic mother and younger sister. When a opportunity to do what she loves (dancing) and make more than twice her factory wage (a whole $50) comes up, she takes it. Little does she know that even though dancing may seem innocent, it will lead her down a path of heartache and danger.
I have had this book on my mental "To-Read" list for quite some time. Sometime when that happens, if I leave a book unread for to long, by the time I get to it I am not longer interested. This was definitely not the case.
This was also one of those books where the main character keeps making bad decisions, and I am writhing in the couch in agony because it is painful to watch her do these things. A couple time I needed to snap the book closed, put it down, and walk it off. While possibly bad for my blood-pressure, that is a sign of a good book in my opinion.
This was more along the lines of what I had hoped Vixen would be. It's a different era, I know, and not a flapper in sight but it is full of glamour, and scandal, gangster wanna-be's, and danger. It felt much more real, and the stakes were, if not higher, more present. If you were a fan of Vixen, but felt it fell short, perhaps this one is for you.
Read-a-likes: Strings Attached by Judy Blundell
Published 2008, Bloomsbury
No comments:
Post a Comment