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November 23, 2015
Readers meet Elizabeth Jane Cochran (aka Nellie Bly) on the eve of her illustrious journalism career in the opening pages of Noyes’s (Plague in the Mirror) biography. Over 13 chapters, this story of the innovative, bootstrapping Bly reveals her many juxtaposed traits (“as frivolous as she was socially earnest, as funny and self-deprecating as she was proud and haughty” writes Noyes in a closing note). The winding narrative initially focuses on Bly’s undercover work, getting committed to a New York City asylum and reporting on its appalling conditions, then recounts her other accomplishments, including circumnavigating the globe in fewer than 80 days and other stunt-style assignments, many of which championed the socially downtrodden. Numerous sidebars and interspersed spreads explore Bly’s childhood and other topics, but while these frequent diversions provide useful context, they are also distracting, forcing shifts in readers’ attention every few pages. Still, Noyes’s thoroughly researched account, with archival photos and myriad quotes from Bly’s own work, offers a well-rounded look at a self-possessed women who was nothing if not resilient. Ages 10–up. Agent: Jill Grinberg, Jill Grinberg Literary Management.
November 15, 2015
As the title implies, this biography focuses largely on reporter Nellie Bly's 10 grim days in a New York City insane asylum for women in 1887, which influenced public opinion and gained her instant celebrity. Bly's famous 1889 trip around the world, inspired by the Jules Verne novel and followed closely by thousands of newspaper readers, is covered in less detail but with plenty of pizzazz. The brisk narrative draws from Bly's own writings and from biographies, skillfully incorporating quotations, dialogue, and well-chosen facts. The overall tone is admiring, but the balanced text also acknowledges criticism of her kind of "stunt" reporting and touches briefly on problems in her personal life. While Bly's work life is presented chronologically, her earlier years are spread out in a disjointed manner in sidebars throughout the book. These and other double-page sidebars are embedded in the middles of chapters, often disrupting the smooth flow of the story. Plentiful black-and-white photographs, cartoons, newspaper pages, and artifacts expand the sense of time and place. Noyes sets Bly's life and career in context, especially with regard to limitations on women and condescending attitudes toward their abilities. A lively biography that reflects the spirit of the intrepid reporter. (author's note, source notes, bibliography, index) (Biography. 11-14)
COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Starred review from December 1, 2015
Gr 6 Up-Daring? Turbulent? Madwoman? When a book's title includes those words, readers are bound to be inspired to open it. When the book is as well done as this one is, readers will stay through the last page. About half of the narrative is devoted to the 10 days that journalist Nellie Bly spent undercover in an asylum for mentally ill women (and women who were put there unjustly by their families). Given the high drama of these real-life events, the author's matter-of-fact writing style keeps the narrative from veering toward sensationalism. Passages from Bly's newspaper article about the experience are threaded into the narrative, thereby keeping her vibrant viewpoint as the dramatic center. The rest of the volume covers Bly's other exploits, personal and professional: her venture around the world in a record-breaking 72 days, her interview with imprisoned anarchist Emma Goldman, and her own marriage at 31 to septuagenarian millionaire Robert Seaman. The illustrations are a mix of straightforward archival photos and surreal retouched photos a la Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (Quirk, 2011). Because the former are captioned with historical facts and the latter are not captioned at all, it is easy to tell the difference between the actual images and the fanciful. Noyes makes history accessible and irresistible in this thrilling account of women's lives, flagrant abuse, scandal, courage, and tenacity. The source notes are extensive, and the research is impeccable. VERDICT This excellent work is a natural fit for units on history, biography, and social studies.-Jennifer Prince, Buncombe County Public Libraries, NC
Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
December 15, 2015
Grades 5-8 In 1887, Nellie Bly left Pittsburgh for New York City to find fame as a journalist. Initially, what she found was poverty and rejection. But what Nellie Bly lacked in education and opportunities, she made up for in courage and determination. Soon she made her mark by becoming an inmate at the infamous insane asylum on Blackwell's Island and reporting on the harrowing conditions there. Next came her around-the-world journey, which brought worldwide recognition. Noyes details these two important experiences and describes others in a well-researched biography that includes copious quotes from Bly and her contemporaries. While the book focuses on Bly as an adult, one-, two-, and four-page features appearing throughout the book offer information on related topics and sometimes fill in facts about her early years. Readers will also learn about Bly's era, particularly the difficulties faced by a woman attempting to support herself and her family. Many period photos and prints illustrate the text. A good, readable introduction to a fascinating vanguard.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
January 1, 2016
With a title ripped from the headlines of Joseph Pulitzer's late-nineteenth-century New York World, Noyes invites readers into the life and times of legendary journalist Nellie Bly. When Bly arrives in New York in 1887, she's unprepared for sexist rejection at the major papers. Determined to make her journalistic mark and desperate for money, she accepts an assignment at the World to go undercover inside the lunatic asylum on Blackwell's Island and subsequently report on conditions there. Noyes smartly uses this hook to engage readers, enriching this and other Bly experiences (such as her famous around-the-world race) with well-placed sidebars that explore the social conditions of poor women, the early years of big newspapers, and flashbacks to Bly's childhood. Clips from her articles give readers a glimpse of Bly's direct writing style, her ways of engaging an audience, her personal involvement, and her straightforward vocabulary (which contrasts dramatically with the purple prose of the articles' headlines). More than a stunt reporter, Bly was later in life able to effect change on behalf of the working poor through her own business ventures. Part chronological, part expository, the narrative, in its selection and placement of incidents, allows readers to become investigators, to form opinions and then discover more information that may support or contradict their previous ideas about this complicated woman. This strong biography concludes with an author's note, source notes, a web- and bibliography, further reading recommendations, and (unseen) picture credits and index. betty carter
(Copyright 2016 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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