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Book Review of Ellis Island

Ellis Island
Ellis Island
Author: Kate Kerrigan
Genre: Literature & Fiction
Book Type: Paperback
judipatooti avatar reviewed on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2


During the 1920s in rural Ireland, Ellie marries John, her childhood sweetheart, they are very poor but happy and hopeful for the future. John is seriously injured during his participation in the Irish Republican Army. With no money coming in they are in dire straits to make ends meet. There is an operation will allow John to walk again but it is terribly expensive. Seeing no other way to restore their hope for a good life, Ellie decides to immigrate to America where she can make ten dollars a week working as a housemaid and she can send money home for her husband's operation. After a while in America, she gets the opportunity to go to school to become a typist, which pays a lot more than a housemaid, and by this time she has gotten caught up in the whirl and glitz of 1920s New York City. Meanwhile, John is begging her to come home and and she's begging him to come to America. This is her dilemma and the plot of the book. Will she stay in America or will she go home to her husband and family?

I did like the story even though the writing was very simple, perhaps a middle school level. Also, I expected the novel to have a little more background and history of early US immigration than it did because that is the title of the book. In reality, it covered the subject in a fast couple of pages and that was it, which left me a little dumfounded as to why the book is titled "Ellis Island". I liked the description of New York City in the 20s because that is one of my favorite time periods that I like to read about and the story gave me the ability to almost experience the excitement of the progressive, bustling city. It's an entertaining fast read although not what I expected.