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Unmentionables, A Novel by Laurie Loewenstein

Release Date: 01/07/2014
Trade Paper (320 pages) 
ISBN 978-1617751943
Marian Elliot Adams, an outspoken advocate for sensible undergarments for women, sweeps onto the Chautauqua stage under a brown canvas tent on a sweltering August night in 1917, and shocks the gathered town of Emporia with her speech: How can women compete with men in the work place and in life if they are confined by their undergarments? The crowd is further appalled when Marian falls off the stage and sprains her ankle, and is forced to remain among them for a week. As the week passes, she throws into turmoil the town’s unspoken rules governing social order, women, and Negroes. The recently widowed newspaper editor Deuce Garland, his lapels glittering with fraternal pins, has always been a community booster, his desire to conform rooted in a legacy of shame–his great-grandfather married a black woman, and the town will never let Deuce forget it, especially not his father-in-law, the owner of the newspaper and Deuce’s boss. Deuce and his father-in-law are already at odds, since the old man refuses to allow Deuce’s stepdaughter, Helen, to go to Chicago to fight for women’s suffrage.

But Marian’s arrival shatters Deuce’s notions of what is acceptable, versus what is right, and Deuce falls madly in love with the tall activist from New York. During Marian’s stay in Emporia, Marian pushes Deuce to become a greater, braver, and more dynamic man than he ever imagined was possible. He takes a stand against his father-in-law by helping Helen escape to Chicago; and he publishes an article exposing the county’s oldest farm family as the source of a recent typhoid outbreak, risking his livelihood and reputation. Marian’s journey takes her to the frozen mud of France’s Picardy region, just beyond the lines, to help destitute villagers as the Great War rages on. Helen, in Chicago, is hired as a streetcar conductor surrounded by bitter men who resent her taking a man’s job. Meanwhile, Deuce struggles to make a living and find his place in Emporia’s wider community after losing the newspaper.
Marian is a powerful catalyst that forces nineteenth-century Emporia into the twentieth century; but while she agitates for enlightenment and justice, she has little time to consider her own motives and her extreme loneliness. Marian, in the end, must decide if she has the courage to face small-town life, and be known, or continue to be a stranger always passing through.

Read “Blood Suckers” by Laurie Loewenstein, part of Akashic’s Mondays Are Murder series.
Click here to read a feature article and interview with Kaylie Jones about Kaylie Jones Books over at Shelf Awareness, and here to read a feature on Laurie Loewenstein on At the Inkwell.
Click here to read a guest post Laurie did for Necessary Fiction; here to read an interview with Laurie Loewenstein at Christoph Paul’s blog; here to read an interview with Laurie at Loren Kleinman’s blog; here to read a feature on Laurie at Sidney Daily Newshere to read a feature on Laurie at The McDonough County Voice; and here to listen to an interview with Laurie on Tri States Public Radio.
Click here to read Laurie Loewenstein’s guest post on Write All The Words! about International Women’s Week.
Listen to an interview with Laurie Loewenstein at ArtScene with Erika Funke (NPR/WVIA Radio).
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