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The Story of Chicago May
 
 

The Story of Chicago May [Kindle Edition]

Nuala O'Faolain
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

Print List Price: $24.95
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Sold by: Penguin Publishing
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Editorial Reviews

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.)
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

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1911 KB
  • Publisher: Riverhead (November 7, 2006)
  • Sold by: Penguin Publishing
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001R9DHRQ
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #396,684 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
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1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars process based research and biography ,Yes!, November 16, 2005
By 
Christina L. Gilleran (south elgin, illinois United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I heartily disagree with the previous review. Nuala O'Faolain is not seeking to merely recreate a biography in this book, but to urge readers to consider and ruminate upon the lives of women on the fringes of society, those millions who have led hard-scrabble, often brutal, lives throughout history. Her commentary seems, to me, not to be intrusive, but rather chronicles the connections made between the lives of the author and the subject. O'Faolain examines what might be universal themes, tying May to her family, to herself, to the reader, to the world. If one only wants to know about Chicago May, in the way we might examine her at a historical museum, this may not be the book for that person, but for those who wonder about how women fall into infamous and terrible situations, how history is rewritten, and what the realistic brutalities of early twentieth century life were--this book will give those readers a lot to think over.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars She Did It Her Way, July 28, 2007
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I first heard of Irish writer Nuala O'Faolain when I picked up one of her books in the WH Smith at Heathrow as I ran to catch a flight back to the States. Sometimes we are drawn to certain authors in mysterious ways, as if the moments were meant to be. Thereafter, I was led to her two memoirs, breathtaking in their candor about moving through stages of life as a young Irish girl, a writer, and mature woman coming to terms with her past.

Knowing this writer's work, I didn't expect "The Story of Chicago May" to be a traditional biography, and it most certainly was not. May Duignan, born in post-famine Ireland, nicked her family's savings and ran away to America. There, she achieved legendary status as "Chicago May," working as a thief, outlaw, showgirl and prostitute.

What I find remarkable is how the writer weaves in her own process of discovery and personal experience in researching and writing the book. This approach won't work for all readers. Some prefer the conventional biography, but others will find this book refreshing. No matter how a writer strives for objectivity, biography writing will never truly elude the subjectivity of the writer's own experience. O'Faolain did it her way, though she painstakingly researched her elusive subject. She literally traced the steps of May through city after city on two different continents.

Years of May's life were spent in prisons on both sides of the Atlantic, but she managed to survive a life on the edge. Exhausted and sick at heart, she later met police reformer August Vollmer, who convinced her to write her autobiography as a way toward the light. O'Faolain refuses to sugarcoat the "Queen of Crook's" struggle to make ends meet, her experiences in and out of prison, or her poor choices in men, several notorious crooks in their own right.

"Hope kept me up," May wrote in her last, desperate note to Vollner before her death as "a tired old prostitute" in an unmarked grave in Philadelphia. But the book is not about a character who tried to save her own soul, whatever that may be interpreted to be. It ends with just as many questions about the seeming lack of meaning in May's life, yet assures us that even such a life as hers is worth examining: "Out there, people are waiting in the dark. Shine the beam of attention out there. The dark recoils."
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Herstory, January 3, 2006
I thought that this was a terrificly engaging book - read in two sittings. I very much liked Ms O'Faolain's two volumes of memoirs and this is a discernable and organic development of those investigations into life and love. This is a feminist, though unacademic, rewriting of history using impressively detailed research to recreate a picture of a largely unknown and 'unimportant' woman who was notorious as a streetwalker and bank-robber in her day. The combination of disparate sources - some less reliable than others - with the author's own ruminations on the mindset of her subject and the exile of her brother, makes this tale of two women layered and effortlessly enagaging. O'Faolain manages to be chatty while shrewly intelligent, approachable while uncompromising in her retelling of a forgotten history. Especially fascinating, and wholey unexpected, is May's encounter with Irish rebel Countess Markievicz in prison in England. O'Faolain manages to uncover a May who is both of her time and very modern; endlessly independent, often ruthless while also foolish and vulnerable in affairs of the heart. Chicago May's life was not heroic but it was filled with wildness and incident - across cities, continents and love-affairs. It would make a wonderful film though it might prove too strange to be believed. O'Faolain's decision to place herself in the narrative of its telling gives back to May some of the humanity denied to her in the yellow press of her time as well as offering the reader an always interesting insight into the mind of a strikingly intelligent, lucid and emotionally frank biographer.
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