From Publishers Weekly
In 1890, 19-year-old May Duignan left her hardscrabble Irish town with her family's savings and set off to create a new life. In a biography that is also a reflection on autobiography, O'Faolain, author of two bestselling memoirs, examines the young woman's transformation into the notorious thief and prostitute Chicago May. Her greatest source is May's own account of her life, which, in significant contrast to modern memoir, is long on action and short on reflection. O'Faolain balances that deficit with smart readings of scattered sources and with evocations of her own life that illuminate the Irish experience in May's time and today. She follows May through the desperate and tough Chicago red light district to the Tenderloin of New York, and then to London, Paris and various prisons. May's opportunities for escape from the life she made came in many forms, including marriage to the black sheep of a respectable New Jersey family and a successful escape with the loot from a heist of the American Express office in Paris. But shortsightedness, loyalty and revenge led her to rebuff each opportunity. While drawing out the lacunae of her story with speculation and description, O'Faolain resists the urge to reinvent or sentimentalize May. The biographer makes herself a complement rather than an intrusion, and May emerges lively, unique and cut from the cloth of Irish and American reinvention. B&w photos not seen by PW. (Sept.)
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Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Award-winning memoirist O'Faolain takes a new direction with her latest book, a biography of Chicago May, who was an unremarkable Irish country girl until she stole her family's earnings and ran off to America. She began a life of crime as a prostitute in 1890s Chicago, and from there crime and a new moniker followed her to New York to London to Paris. Along the way, May fell in and out of love and crossed paths with criminals and historical figures alike. O'Faolain's search for May's soul, told with her usual mesmerizing, lovely prose, is the most touching aspect of her biography. In O'Faolain's hands, May, a moderately infamous character in Irish and American tall tales, is revealed to be intelligent and emotional, and most of all a product of her time. This is not only a thorough portrait of a woman on the wrong path; it is also a fresh and informative view of turn-of-the-twentieth-century America, and fascinating testimony to the need to tell and preserve true stories from all walks of life. Annie Tully
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

