Dorothea Lange. I wonder
how many young people recognize her name or recognize the most famous
photograph, “Migrant Mother” taken in 1936 during the Great Depression.
Probably not that many in the thirty and younger crowd. I have to admit, while
I know the name and the photograph, I knew little about the woman behind the
camera. Author Daznik has written a compelling biographical fiction novel that
allows readers to get to know Dorothea during her coming-of age as an artist in
the 1920s.
Dorothea left her native
Hoboken, New Jersey, when she as twenty-three years old for San Francisco. She
arrived in a town, only twelve years from the 1906 earthquake, that celebrated
and misfits.
One of the first things
I learned about Dorothea was that, when she was seven years old, she suffered
from polio which left her with a stunted leg and a noticeable limp. She loved
photography because she felt that she could hide behind a camera; that no one
would notice her.
When she first arrived,
she was pickpocketed of all the money, some two hundred dollars, she had in the
world. In a city where she knew no one, she was terrified. She spent her first
night there on the street. One of the first people she was met was, in the
book, called Caroline Lee. In reality, Caroline is referred to as “Ah-yee” or
the “Chinese Mission Girl” in the historical data.
The two became quite
close. Carolina introduced her to the Monkey Block, where all the artists
lived. It once occupied the site of the Transamerica Building. Its
pyramid-shaped is one of the city’s most iconic buildings. Back then, Monkey
Block was “a four-story artists’ colony that housed some eight hundred writers,
performers, and artists…and it was the heart of San Francisco’s bohemian area.”
According to the Author’s Notes, that only Chinatown still stands---and looks
much like it did in the 1920s.
“’The Bohemians’ is
about a lost time and hidden history.” It is a story that resonates in today’s
world---anti-immigration sentiments, corrupt politics, war, a world pandemic
and racism.
I almost put this novel
on my DNF list, but I kept seeing it on all the book sites. Granted I didn’t really
care for the first 80 pages, but if you decide to read this novel, hang in
there until then. Something grabbed me and wouldn’t let go. “The Bohemians”
receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.
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