The Real Minerva

by Mary Sharratt

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A "memorable [and] entertaining" novel of three strong women in 1920s small-town Minnesota by the author of Revelations (The Washington Post Book World).
Winner of the Willa Literary Award
Finalist for the Minnesota Book Award
In a Midwestern farming community in 1923, as book-loving Penny enters adolescence, her mother, Barbara, pulls her out of school to send her to work. Destined to become a cleaning woman like her mother, Penny sees no escape from her bleak existence—until a scandalous show more figure arrives in the town of Minerva, Minnesota: Cora, very pregnant, very headstrong, and very alone, has come to make a home on her grandfather's farm.
Intrigued by this curious new resident, Penny sets out to work for Cora, setting into motion events that will change multiple lives. Drawing on her mother's and grandmother's stories of Minnesota farm life in the early twentieth century, acclaimed author Mary Sharratt has created a suspenseful and moving novel about the strength of women and the unexpected friendships that form between them.
"A paean to the bond between mothers and daughters . . . engrossing." —Booklist
"Wonderful." —Caroline Leavitt, New York Times-bestselling author of With or Without You.
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7 reviews
Most small towns have manic bi-polar personalities. There’s the postcard veneer visible to the naked eye: the white picket fences, the neatly-mowed lawns, the porch swings, the cheery wave of neighbors passing in the post office parking lot.

Then there’s the reality of those storybook communities, the sub-veneer that no one likes to admit but everyone likes to talk about (behind cupped hands at the church potluck, under the hairdresser’s blow dryer, across the picket fence). This is the stuff of small-town gossip, the fodder for hometown legends.

In Mary Sharratt’s new novel, The Real Minerva, set in a fictional Minnesota town in 1923, the sub-veneer is squirmy and crawling with scandal. On the book’s first page, we learn, show more “the tallest building isn’t the water tower or the grain elevator but the steeple of Saint Anne’s Catholic Church.€? Religion may loom large in Prohibition-era Minerva, Minnesota, but so do adultery, murder and several other deadly sins.

For heaven’s sake, the town even has an axe murderess—quiet, kind-hearted Sadie Ostertag who chopped up her four children then tried to hang herself—though she’s mainly there to serve as wallpaper since The Real Minerva centers around three other females: housemaid Barbara Niebeck who is having an affair with her employer; her 15-year-old daughter Penny who is slowly realizing her mother is much less than a saint; and the enigmatic Cora Egan who has come to Minerva, pregnant and wearing men’s clothes, to escape a bad marriage in Chicago.

The three characters’ lives collide when Penny discovers her mother’s infidelity and runs away to the farm outside of town where Cora’s been living alone for the past several months. When Penny arrives, Cora is in the throes of childbirth. Like a plucky Laura Ingalls character, Penny helps deliver the baby, lends a hand with the farm chores, then decides to stay at the farm when she finds herself bonding with the mysterious Cora. It’s not long before the older woman is teaching Penny about the ways of motherhood and how to be on guard against scheming, slimy men (like the dangerously temperamental husband she left back in Chicago).

Meanwhile, back in town, Barbara discovers that sex can sometimes lead to love as she gradually starts responding to the affections from her boss, Laurence Hamilton, owner of the soda pop factory, Rotary Club member, singer in the Presbyterian church choir, and husband to a woman who’s been in a coma for four years. Barbara scrubs floors, washes windows, does laundry and obediently responds to Laurence’s midday urges. Lurking at the edges of this upstairs-downstairs drama is Hamilton’s petulant 15-year-old daughter Irene whose eyes shoot daggers at Barbara whenever she’s in the room. If The Real Minerva was a movie, they’d be cuing the ominous-foreshadowy music at this point.

Sharratt sets several sub-plots in motion, then wisely steps back and lets them play out with a minimum of authorial intrusion. This is the kind of writing which engages the reader without word gymnastics, verbal fireworks or symphonic sentences. We have plot, we have characters and both work in harmony to drive the reader forward through the pages. Along the way, we become fully caught up in the lives of Penny, Cora and Barbara, suspecting the eventual outcome of their drama, but hoping against hope things might go differently for them.

The Real Minerva also reminds us how horrendously awful small-town gossip and politics can be. In the shadow of Saint Anne’s steeple, wagging tongues ruin lives and alter destinies: “The thing [Barbara] hated most about Minerva, she decided, was that everyone thought they knew you, but they saw only what fit their own notion of a person, what they were comfortable seeing.â€?

Though it’s set in 1920s Minnesota (a world which Sharratt brings to life with vivid detail), this novel reverberates into our 21st-century lives. Read The Real Minerva and you might find yourself thinking about your own hometown and all the intolerable human behavior that lies beneath the veneer.
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This story takes place in the functional town of Minerva, Mn. Young Penny lives with her mother, a cleaning woman for the Hamiltons and has to deal with Irene Hamilton, a girl her age. Irene treats her like dirt. After she realizes he mother is having an affair with Mr. Hamilton (Mrs. is in a nursing home with some unknown disease that has left her a vegetable); Penny has problems with the anger she has towards her mother. Penny ends up, somewhat accidentally helping Cora Egan, a new unusual resident who lives on a farm in the middle of nowhere. An unexpected bond forms between then that lasts their whole lives. A very good book!
A Mary Sharratt book is always a good read for me. I'm continually impressed by the variety of settings she chooses for her novels. This story takes place (mostly) in the 1920's in small-town Minnesota. The lives of the three main characters(all strong women) in the book were woven together by their love, sins/guilt, and rescuing each other.
While Minerva is a town in the story. I think there is significance in who Minerva is. Minerva is the Roman goddess of wisdom who is equated to the Greek goddess Athena.

Who is the real Minerva here? This book takes us along for a ride with three women who seem destined to fail. Each must rise above their pasts. Who will survive and come out successful? These three women all show growth and development throughout the story. I wound up liking all the women in the end. They are all doing the best they can in a man’s world. I really enjoyed this one. It shows us that love and family can exist between people who are not related. The climax has an interesting twist and the ending is a good one. This is another book that would definitely be show more great for a book club. I give this one a 4 out of 5 stars.

Why aren't there more reviews on this? It was definitely worth reading!!
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I really enjoyed reading this book.It was a quick and an interesting read. It is the story about 3 different women who have in common that they are strong even though they might not know it.
Some of the plot was a surprise to me and that does not happen that much so that was nice. I am planning on trying to find this author's first book and i hope she will write more. Loved The Vanishing Point.
I really loved this book.

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Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Real Minerva
Original publication date
2006
People/Characters
Penny; Barbara; Cora
Important places
Minnesota, USA; Minerva, Minnesota, USA
Dedication
For Joske
Blurbers
Watson, Larry; Leavitt, Caroline

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3569 .H3449 .R43Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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Statistics

Members
96
Popularity
334,357
Reviews
7
Rating
(3.96)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
UPCs
2
ASINs
3