Gilded mountain A novel

Kate Manning

Book - 2022

In the early 1900s, Sylvie Pelletier leaves her family's Colorado mountain cabin to start work at a wealthy mine-owner's manor house and is fascinated by he luxury around her until she discovers the family's philosophy is at odds with the unfair labor practices that built their fortune.

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FICTION/Manning Kate
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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Scribner 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Manning (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
451 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982160944
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In 1907, Sylvie Pelletier is a first-generation American and the daughter of French Canadian parents. Sylvie's father finds work in a marble mine in Colorado owned by the rich Padgett family. Sylvie, her mother, and brothers join him there, only to find harsh conditions and unrest. Sylvie's father favors unionizing to combat the company's unfair labor practices. Sylvie takes a job as a printer's devil for a female and socialist newspaper editor who champions the labor cause but then finds herself torn when she's offered a position as private secretary to the mine owner's wife. This provides Sylvia with a window into a life of luxury and throws her together with the troubled Padgett heir, Jasper. Sylvie's feelings for Jasper and his world provoke guilt and inner turmoil. Manning's prose is descriptive, combining such real historical figures as King Leopold of Belgium and labor organizer Mother Jones and fictional characters to position Sylvie in the midst of multiple social struggles. Readers interested in tales about privilege, class struggle, economic disparity, and racism will find these issues explored throughout Manning's tale.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Manning (My Notorious Life) sets this stellar coming-of-age novel in early 20th-century Moonstone, Colo., where a young woman gets a firsthand look at the machinations behind an exploitive mining company and its workers' efforts to unionize. Sixteen-year-old Sylvie Pelletier's quarryman father, Jacques, works in the dangerous high-altitude marble mines owned by industrialist Jerome Padgett. Jacques and union representative George Lonahan want to organize the miners, efforts the company fights with various forms of intimidation that escalate to hiring violent Pinkerton thugs, while Padgett's wife, Inge, hopes to pacify the workers with company-owned libraries and schools. Sylvie leaves her job at the local newspaper and moves into the Padgetts' luxurious manor for a higher-paying role as Inge's live-in secretary in summer 1907. There she meets the Gradys, a Black couple whose complex ties to the Padgett family are later revealed, and falls in love with Padgett's son, Jace, from a previous marriage. The hard-drinking and idealistic Jace seems to return Sylvie's feelings but departs for college at the end of summer without saying goodbye. Sylvie returns to the newspaper, whose fearless female owner's reporting on injustices at the mine inspires Sylvie to become a reporter. Meanwhile, winter salary stoppages and a death at the mine rekindle the drive toward unionization as Sylvie grows attracted to Lonahan. Sylvie's vivid first-person narration captures her own maturing perceptions and the complex personalities of the major characters as well as supporting players including activist Mary "Mother" Jones. Manning shines at giving the era's class, racial, and economic tensions a human face. This is one to savor. Agent: Sarah Burnes, Gernert Company. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Everything old is (unfortunately) new again. Echoes of current social problems resonate throughout Manning's extensively researched saga of a young woman's life in a Colorado mining town at the turn of the 20th century. Teenage Sylvie Pelletier's family is forced to relocate from Vermont to Colorado after her father runs afoul of anti-union sentiments at his marble quarrying job. Naïvely, Sylvie looks forward to a more unfettered existence in Colorado, a thought which is quashed almost from the outset of her life there. The economic realities of working-class life in a company town are harsh, and winters in that setting are almost unendurable. After finishing school, Sylvie obtains a job as a jack-of-all-trades at the town's newspaper, an opportunity which allows her a small measure of independence and income while opening her eyes to the value of an uncensored press. Soon, she is hired as a secretary by the dilettantish trophy wife of the mining company's owner, a position which allows her an insider's view of the family's opulent lifestyle and deplorable labor and social practices. As the mine's workers become increasingly militant about union organization in the face of their exploitation, Sylvie must reconcile her infatuation with the whimsical yet troubled heir to the mining fortune with her familial obligations (and an attraction to a labor organizer!). Issues of race relations and the toxic legacy of slavery figure prominently in the narrative, as do questions about the legitimacy of unions, corporate and workplace regulation, and the privatization of police functions (via the employment of murderous Pinkerton guards by the mine owners). Manning's bildungsroman not only provides a clear portrait of her young heroine; it captures the intensity of an unsettled time and place in American history. Manning's historical fiction entertains and instructs. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.