Ms Perfect Roast Beef Advert Emma
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"'Call 'em weasels. That covers their style, occupation, and character'" (Emma describing a certain desirable element hanging around a department store at Lo
A four-and-a-HALF-star road trip with 30-something divorced mother-of-one "Emma McChesney, Mrs. (I place it in the background because she generally did)" (Loc. 179), proud 10-year-road-vet representative of T.A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats, "and her favorite pastime was studying men and women. The two things went well together" (Loc. 352):"'Call 'em weasels. That covers their style, occupation, and character'" (Emma describing a certain desirable element hanging around a department store at Loc. 420).
"'Full?' repeated Emma McChesney (and if it weren't for the compositer there'd be an exclamation point after that question mark)" (Loc.487).
"Emma McChesney stood on the bottom step, looking up and down Main Street and breathing in great draughts of that unadjectivable air" (Loc. 555).
"'When you begin to talk like that...I always feel as though I could take hold in a way to make those famous jobs that Hercules tackled look like little Willie's chores after school'" (Emma's new boss at Loc. 1463).
If you enjoyed this sample, hop on the next train through Edna Ferber's early-20th-century Midwest with her plucky warrior, Emma McChesney.
Thanks for reading.
...moreThe ease with which she not only takes down a young, married Lothario who interrupts her meal, but sets him bac
Emma McChesney has been on the road representing T.A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats for a decade when we meet her reading a trade magazine over her supper in the Berger House hotel dining room in Three Rivers, Michigan. She's learned a thing or two making her own way since her divorce and her $6,000 a year salary and commissions not only supports her, but also her 17-year-old son, Jock.The ease with which she not only takes down a young, married Lothario who interrupts her meal, but sets him back on the straight and narrow path, had me imagining how she'd handle Charlie Cowell, the travelling anvil salesman in The Music Man. He was chasing after Marian the Librarian in River City, Iowa, in the summer of 1912, right in the middle of the serialization of these stories in American Magazine, and could easily have crossed paths with Emma McChesney, too.
I enjoyed this humorous collection, first of a trilogy, and look forward to the other two. Paul Chenevert's reading on the free LibriVox audiobook was particularly good. If you're in the mood for a light and entertaining read that sounds surprisingly fresh for its age, give this a try.
...moreRoast Beef Medium is the first of three books about the adventures of Emma McChesney. Edna Ferber, also the author of Giant and Show Boat, wrote the McChesney books long enough ago that they're all in the public domain and ebook copies of them can be downloaded from sites like Project Gutenberg. I listened to a wonderfully narrated Libravox recording, also free, which kept me grinning even when stuck in traffic.
...moreThis is a continuation of "fashion" books I've been reading in a cluster. Emma is a traveling sales rep (a "lady drummer") for a petticoat company. What's a petticoat?
It's what Diana needed in this photo--
It's a slip, or half slip, or bra slip. Until I discovered bra slips, I never understood the advantage of a sundress if you had to wear a slip and pantyhose with it. Of course now t
3.5 rounded up. Although it's not available today for free on Amazon, keep an eye open for a future opportunity.This is a continuation of "fashion" books I've been reading in a cluster. Emma is a traveling sales rep (a "lady drummer") for a petticoat company. What's a petticoat?
It's what Diana needed in this photo--
It's a slip, or half slip, or bra slip. Until I discovered bra slips, I never understood the advantage of a sundress if you had to wear a slip and pantyhose with it. Of course now those rules are long gone. I think the only reason you'd wear a slip/petticoat now is if you wanted a skirt to flare out.
Petticoats in the 1920s when sales plummeted due to the "flapper dresses" and hob skirts--
You wonder why they didn't hire more women salesmen to promote women's wear. As another reviewer said, Emma comes across as a tough talking dame from the 40s--makes sense since Ferber went on to write other books made into films.
The title comes from the first chapter when Emma explains to a new sales rep that you order "Roast Beef, Medium" at the hotel dining rooms because you know what you're getting. Similiar to the "mystery meat" we'd have at college.
...moreOne thing I noticed more in this collection than I have in other Ferber collections. Any time she mentions Emma McChesney, it is by stating her full name. Even Emma McChesney's dearest friend calls her Emma McChesney. I do wonder why that seemed necessary....maybe Ferber just liked the sound of the name, who knows? It doesn't distract, but I did notice it....and will watch for it in other works. Does Ferber do the same for other heroines or is it only Emma McChesney who gets the Emma McChesney treatment? I have four more Ferber works available to me so someday we shall see!!
...more"When Emma McChesney aimed to get things out of the way she did not use a shovel; she used a road-drag."
What a treat! I will be searching for more Edna Ferber's stories of Mrs. McChesney. What an amazing woman.
"When Emma McChesney aimed to get things out of the way she did not use a shovel; she used a road-drag."
...more
I cannot tell if Edna Thurber really believed that housewifery and marriage were the only things that could fulfill a woman, or if she felt (perhaps rightly) that it was obligatory to throw that kind of sentiment over a book that's about a strong single woman with a career. Reading this book was actually a bit painful because of the unending sexual harrassment Emma faced. It was of a very sanitized "let me take you out to dinner because you're so beautiful" kind, but I still found it upsetting. Weirdly, this book reminded me of the Lad: A Dog series by Albert Payson Terhune because they both have the same thing happening over and over: Lad/Emma meets someone who is prejudiced against him/her, but then Lad/Emma proves him/herself through incredible heroism and nobleness, and the person realizes how wonderful s/he is. Couldn't Emma just once meet someone who didn't make all kinds of assumptions about her, and why did she have to educate these sleazebags over and over? It was just depressing, but I think hyper-realistic.
Here's a description of Emma and her best friend. "Theirs was not a talking friendship. It was a thing of depth and understanding, like the friendship between two men." Hate yourself much? But then, "They sat looking into each other's eyes, and down beyond, where the soul holds forth. And because what each saw there was beautiful and sightly they were seized with shyness such as two men feel when they love each other, so they awkwardly endeavored to cover up their shyness with words." Oh, I see, so it's like that kind of friendship between men.
I looked at Edna Ferber's Wikipedia page and it seems a lot of people think she was gay, but there's no evidence she ever had a romantic or sexual relationship with anyone, so a lot of other people think there's no basis for that assumption. I am equally compelled by both points of view, especially based on the passage above. On the one hand, it seems obvious that a woman who never had any attachment with a man was a lesbian and just kept it on the DL; practically everyone I know is gay so why not Edna Ferber? On the other hand, maybe she was ace and just wanted to gaze into someone's eyes, but people can't conceive of that as possible so they are unfairly stuffing her into the gay category. Either way, Edna Ferber was not your average bear, and this book reads as very "coded" but I can't quite crack the code.
...moreHaving read this delightful, clever and often funny series of stories amidst a news cycle filled with disturbing cases of sexual exploitation and harassment of women in the workplace or women attempting to join it, Emma displays blunt self-assurance and moxie when she is, frequently, hit upon by men. After one man suddenly kisses her, she "wrench(es) herself free with a violent jerk" and then, after upbraiding him mercilessly, accuses him of having planted a "married kiss," before continuing her scorching lecture. In a later story, when the boss's son propositions her, she says, "So, if I let you make love to me, I keep my job, is that it?" and then details her worst-scenario job, which she claims she would gladly take over giving in to him.
Of course, Emma McChesney is a fictional character, one that Ferber imbued with a surplus of confidence and fearlessness. Her biggest vulnerability is with her son, Jock, who appears in several stories as a nearly-grown up 17-year-old and in whom Emma sees too much of the selfishness of his father. While Emma is not drawn in a rich and deep way, she is still a full-bodied, colorful sympathetic and very human character trying to balance motherhood with making a living.
Historically, these stories were written at a time when women were already well established working in stores but much newer to life on the road. As such, Emma's adventures include other aspects of standing up for herself as a woman alone, such as refusing a hotel room she knows will be close to the loud boiler room; dealing with women buyers who still prefer placing orders with men, and fighting rumors that she is "morally compromised."
Ferber's language is wonderful, and while it is old-fashioned, that is a big part of its charm. There are two other Emma McChesney books and I will certainly be checking them out.
I can't get enough of a character whose feminism isn't strident or angry, but is part of her confidence and dignity. After she has cleared her name with her new boss from ugly rumors spread by a competitor, she is offered better territory as a way of making amends. Emma cries briefly, while telling her boss, "For Heaven's sake, stop patting me on the head!"
...moreI read this book as part of my My Year in 1918 project (myyearin1918.com).
...more3 stars (liked it)
A witty 1913 novel, and the first in a trilogy, chronicling the trials and tribulations of the traveling saleswoman, Emma McChesney, as she navigates her way in a world dominated by men while staying connected with her son as a single mother. I found her no-nonsense attitude as the main appeal of the story and wished that, once the novelty of introducing her personality had waned, there had been a bit more interest to the plot.
Even my husband got sucked into the story - I was listening to the audio book with Phil Chenovert's engaging narration.
In some ways very different from "Fanny Herself" or "So Big"... but good. Edna Ferber is always good!Even my husband got sucked into the story - I was listening to the audio book with Phil Chenovert's engaging narration.
...moreWhile Emma is still an impressive character almost a hundred years later, Ferber couldn't quite rise above all of the biases of her own time, as the women in the book go all weak in the knees with pleasure at the very thought of plunging their arms into a basin of dirty dishwater. Because we all know that's what every woman really longs to be doing.
Nevertheless, it's an entertaining read, and Emma's down-to-earth wisdom, while it gets a bit preachy at times, it's well worth your time.
...moreEmma's bravery in getting a job as sales rep and traveling a large area back then makes her a real model of self confidence and her ability to also pay for good schooling for her s Ferber had the smarts to both please her readers, mostly female, but also to push for fairer treatment for women in life. This book, first in the trilogy, really draws readers in. Some of the style may seem stilted, but the joy of reading a 100 year old book that still speaks to today's lives and values IS important.
Emma's bravery in getting a job as sales rep and traveling a large area back then makes her a real model of self confidence and her ability to also pay for good schooling for her son while she's "on the road" testifies to her values. Though she has the weakness of needing only the most recent fashions, her practicality otherwise shows a clear head. Each of the books may be read as a single unit, but the fun is to read them in order. Most praiseworthy is the modern writing style, making the books all of a piece. If you've read some of the books from a century ago, you understand how convoluted and nearly archaic they can be. Emma deserves much wider readership than the modest few who have explored Ferber's early works. I can recommend her short story collections nearly as highly. ...more
I can imagine that the issues she mentions were quite relevant at the time: she's a working mother, who left her son at home to pursue a career as the only woman among men and manages to earn a "man's salary"!
A book written in the early 1900 about a woman who works as a travelling salesman.I can imagine that the issues she mentions were quite relevant at the time: she's a working mother, who left her son at home to pursue a career as the only woman among men and manages to earn a "man's salary"!
...moreFerber was born August 15, 1885, in
Edna Ferber was an American novelist, short story writer and playwright. Her novels were popular in her lifetime and included the Pulitzer Prize-winning So Big (1924), Show Boat (1926; made into the celebrated 1927 musical), Cimarron (1929; made into the 1931 film which won the Academy Award for Best Picture), and Giant (1952; made into the 1956 Hollywood movie).Ferber was born August 15, 1885, in Kalamazoo, Michigan, to a Hungarian-born Jewish storekeeper, Jacob Charles Ferber, and his Milwaukee, Wisconsin-born wife, Julia (Neumann) Ferber. At the age of 12, after living in Chicago, Illinois and Ottumwa, Iowa, Ferber and her family moved to Appleton, Wisconsin, where she graduated from high school and briefly attended Lawrence University. She took newspaper jobs at the Appleton Daily Crescent and the Milwaukee Journal before publishing her first novel. She covered the 1920 Republican National Convention and 1920 Democratic National Convention for the United Press Association.
Ferber's novels generally featured strong female protagonists, along with a rich and diverse collection of supporting characters. She usually highlighted at least one strong secondary character who faced discrimination ethnically or for other reasons; through this technique, Ferber demonstrated her belief that people are people and that the not-so-pretty people have the best character.
Ferber was a member of the Algonquin Round Table, a group of wits who met for lunch every day at the Algonquin Hotel in New York.
...moreOther books in the series
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