And She Was

by Cindy Dyson

On This Page

Description

Sweeping across centuries and into the Aleutian Islands of Alaska's Bering Sea, And She Was begins with a decision and a broken taboo when three starving Aleut mothers decide to take their fate into their own hands. Two hundred and fifty years later, by the time Brandy, a floundering, trashy, Latin-spewing cocktail waitress, steps ashore in the 1980s, Unalaska Island has absorbed their dark secret--a secret that is both salvation and shame. In a tense interplay between past and present, And show more She Was explores Aleut history, mummies, conquest, survival, and the seamy side of the 1980s in a fishing boomtown at the edge of the world, where a lost woman struggles to understand the gray shades between heroism and evil, and between freedom and bondage. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

12 reviews
I don't even know where to start with this book... It's about a thirty-something woman, Brandy, in the 80s who follows her newest boyfriend to Dutch Harbor, AK (think site of 'Deadliest Catch'). A professional cocktail waitress, she's naturally blond, from a broken home and tries to never think about the future. But then she starts learning more about the history of the Aleut people, especially the women, and begins to discover many dark and compelling truths. Brandy also learns more about herself -- but she goes kicking and screaming the entire way. I have mixed feelings about this powerful story. First, it's pretty crass in parts due to the nature of her lifestyle and the people she hangs with -- but you also learn so much about the show more Alaskan people/culture. It's so layered like Brandy herself. Beautiful writing but not for everyone. show less
½
this is an excellent first effort; her writing is good and has a lot of potential to be even better. in places it felt like she was trying too hard or that she wanted to imbue a sentence or paragraph with more meaning than she actually gave it. but that's ok. i can see what she was wanting to do and i think that generally she was successful.

if i had read this when it came out, i know that i'd have liked it even more. today, though, i am sitting with a lot of discomfort about a white woman writing this story. (would it have been published and would i have known about it had it been an aleut woman writing about her history? i don't know, but the chances are small.) but dyson writes about aleut history in such an insider kind of way that i show more am not comfortable, knowing she isn't aleutian. that said, the story she extrapolated from the histories she read really is fantastic. the way she interpreted the missing pieces leads to quite a story, and one that makes a lot of sense, even if we don't know that it's specifically true. it has this bit of magic, though, that hovers over it, that white people tend to give to native traditions. so i don't know. and as a white person myself, i don't know that i can judge.

so i both really liked this and really wasn't sure at the same time. maybe another part of my discomfort is that the book was told in a back and forth between present day (1986) and history, and the history sections are consistently stronger even as they are the parts that pose the potential issue. i think the further i get from this book the more the discomfort will fade and i'll be left with the powerful story of these aleut women who, through history and generations, took their power in their own hands and used it over and over again to save their community. i will forget all about brandy's story, told in 1986, as i never cared much for those chapters. the real story in this story isn't brandy's; it's the aleut history and the strength of female community. truthfully she could have just told the aleut story and left brandy's out and the book wouldn't have lost much. but then i'd probably be even more uncomfortable with the white writer telling the story of aleutian women. those sections are much stronger, from a story perspective, though.

this is hard to rate because of these dichotomies. i'd probably rate the history chapter 3.5 even as i'm uncomfortable with a white woman telling the story from the aleut point of view, and the brandy chapters no more than a 2. so maybe a 2.75 on average then.
show less
½
Another happy find on the remainder rack. My only disappointment was the couple of times Dyson couldn't seem to make a transition to a new period within the story and inserted instructional paragraphs in italics. But her feeling for the Aleut women and her ability to draw us along with Brandy as she learns who she is capable of being was masterful. Brandy was not a character with whom I could identify at all, at first, I thought. (I don't believe I've ever willingly listened to The Talking Heads.) But I came to love her and root for her and thank her for teaching me about another side of a woman's life. To me that's what books are really for, letting me become, in part, someone wholly different from myself, and yet with whom I share so show more much. show less
Brandy is a young woman who drifts through life, moving from man to man, following each wherever he takes her. At the start of this book she has just followed the latest all the way to Dutch, a tiny town on the Aleutian Island of Unalaska. Intertwined with her story is that of several generations of Aleutian women, each sacrificing so that her people may live. The first half of the book is kind of slow, paddling around in shallow waters to thoroughly set the scene. After that it picks up, both the story and its characters gaining depth as Brandy begins her slow transformation at the edge of the world.This is an atmospheric book, in that it involves highly detailed characters with highly detailed backstories living in a highly detailed show more world, but not a whole lot actually happens. It is not the kind of book that keeps you up at night, dying to read just one more chapter. This is not necessarily a bad thing - this is a good book to curl up with on a quiet afternoon and just let yourself travel to the Aleutians of twenty years ago. show less
This the story of a young woman who moves to Alaska. It's also the story of the Aleut people back several generations and the role of women in that society. It examines the importance of community and the links between individual and collective history.
½
I loved this book. The author handled the shifting perspectives and time periods with ease and created an authentic female protagonist for readers to care about. There was much detail about the Aleutian Islands and people. Let's hope we see more from Ms. Dyson soon.
One of the most intriguing books I have read in a while. It's not quite a mystery, more a story of self-discovery. Cindy Dyson is an amazing talent and anyone who has not read this book is missing out on a fabulous reading experience.

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

7 Works 211 Members

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
And She Was
People/Characters
Brandy
Important places
Alaska, USA; Aleutian Islands, Alaska, USA
First words
I felt the edge slip sometimes.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction, Romance, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3604 .Y75 .A84Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
189
Popularity
173,605
Reviews
11
Rating
(3.24)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
2