Member Reviews
I was provided an ARC for an honest review by NetGalley.
An incredible story of n abusive marriage in the 40’s and 50’s. Well written and very well researched. Carol and Joe marry when she becomes pregnant. What follows is yers of abuse as their youngest suffers from polio. There is the typical pressure on young married people who struggle financially but Joe releases that pressure by abusing and controlling his wife and later on his daughter. It’s hard to comprehend the mindset of the abused and their abused. This is an interesting take on that.
This book is extremely important because it covers a topic that is very sensitive and not often talked about, and it does it so elegantly. The characters in this book are all very well written, and as a reader you can't help but feel a connection with the main character, Carol. They say that love is blind sometimes, and this book is the absolute epitome of that.
The book does a really good job of showcasing how love can sometimes be confused with comfort or fear. The book also does a great job of showcasing how women at the time didn't have it as easy, and it wasn't as simple for them to just leave a relationship as it possibly is nowadays - today they have multiple options, back then they truly didn't.
I love how the book also talks a lot about the issues surrounding polio, in the case of Carol's Daughter. The book talks about how there isn't a vaccine right away for polio, but then how the vaccine does get produced and how there's a lot of mistrust and people not wanting to get the vaccine, it made me think of nowadays with the covid vaccine - so that was an interesting connection there.
I know that the book's main focus is about spousal abuse, but I do love how it focuses a lot on polio and what happened in the beginning with the epidemic, what it was like for a family to deal with something like that, and what society's reactions were to the disease.
Overall, I think this book does a great job of showcasing how layered spousal abuse actually is, how hard and difficult and treacherous it can be to leave an abusive relationship, and how back then the system was basically rigged against women - which is mind boggling.
I would recommend this book to just about anyone mainly because it sheds light on a topic that probably isn't discussed as often as it should be. Even though the book is set in the early to mid-1900s, it does a good job of showcasing the mental gymnastics that women sometimes have to do in order to try to rationalize the situations that they're put in regardless of what their actions are - and the fact that women of the 21st century have a lot in common with women of the 20th century says a lot.
This is the story of women suffering in silence for fear of losing their child, security and sense of home. The main character, Carol, makes many mistakes and seemingly difficult choices as she navigates an abusive and toxic marriage. As polio ravages, Carol tries to keep her family together, maintain a sense of "home" and shield her children from their abusive father, Joe. Despite impossible circumstances, Carol plans a secret escape. Along a risky path, she empowers her daughter to know no limits and teaches her son to stop the cycle of violence and gender discrimination. This was a great book set during WWII and its aftermath, and went beyond to the struggles of home life following the war (an area neglected by many novels). I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in historical fiction.
Thanks to NetGalley for a prepublication of this book. A sad yet joyous story about a woman who dreams of her forever after happiness but after marrying Joe, she discovers how cruel life can be. Her daughter suffers from polio and her husband if drafted into the navy. Thankfully he is stationed nearby but he begins to ambush is wife both physically and emotionally and she doesn’t know the way out.
Very interesting story of abuse is 40-50s. Carol was a likable character. She struggled with how to deal with an abusive husband in a time where the deck was stacked against her.
How she dealt with her daughter with polio was inspiring. She had to find Ellie treatment and get her to appointments, most of the time by walking the bus but most of all for ensuring that Ellie was ready for life and it’s challenges.
I was really rooting for Carol.
Thanks to NetGalley for allowing me to read this book
A story of the 1940s and 50s about a mother's struggles to help her daughter after contracting polio and raise her son to be a kind and respectful man, the exact opposite of his abusive father. Carol does her best to cope with her life without depending on help from her father and two brothers which was something that I personally could not quite understand or justify. She seeks guidance from her church but ends up being reprimanded for "not making the marriage work". But despite all the hardships she keeps pursuing her dream for a better life and independence by taking small steps each day despite the fear and gruesome punishments she is subjected to.
I really enjoyed this book. It is a sad, and yet all too believable story of the violence that husbands inflicted on their wives. This was set in the 1940’s and 1950’s, and all too real the distrust and pure disbelief that this wife was met with, when she tried to tell people about what she was experiencing. Even though this violence still exists, it, at the least, gives you an awareness of the shelters, and other avenues a woman has today to try to escape this form of abuse.
The Moments Between Dreams is the story of Millions Of Women suffering in silence of fear to lose everything their child, their security, and sometimes themselves. it is a story that I've read many times in different books or stories that are real and true and it seems like the world is not ready to finally say enough is enough. of this violence and transgression, we continue perpetuating towards women and so many innocents that are there trying to survive in a MEN world.
At the beginning of the book when everything started to happen like many women were in anger, screaming to Carol to stop making and giving excuses, like many of you we always try to judge and suggest why she didn't leave sooner or why she didn't do this or that. but after reading and knowing many cases of this nature I've come to the conclusion that is not that easy if you don't know what it is in stakes. in this case, Carol was afraid to lose her daughter who was still underage and Joe could easily file for kidnapping or something to make Carol's life a living hell.
I cry so much with this book because it is not fair that we still living under these circumstances and nothing is Done, man always get the benefit of the doubt, men always get the free ticket, I know during WW2 during those years 1940's and 50's women weren't not even allow to get divorced but still, Doctors and Priest would turn their faces the other way whenever a woman will declare she has been abused by her own husband. I never understood this, is it more valuable a man's life than a women's? is more valuable the status, the marriage than the lives of women? this is the case and this is each answer of this book told me that was the case.
Even Tommy once he was older, still question his mother's motives, because he never receive the same treatment from his father just because he was a boy but Carol and Ellie receive a very different person someone with so much lack of respect towards women in general, Joe was the topical macho guy, insecure who will treat his wife as an enemy, the fact that he had a gun in his car and didn't let his wife drive was just disgusting.
in my opinion, Carol made so many mistakes but I guess that was part of the process for her to finally grow and move on meanwhile she gave so many excuses if you have two brothers and a father that can help you very easily I'm not sure why she took so much time trusting they will help her and move on.
The worst part was when Joe started to hit Ellie too that's when I really wanted to pull him out of the book and kick him a few times. he was a terrible father, his example was the worst and I will not change my mind no matter what.
This is a book of faith, hope, and resilience, The story of a woman who was doing everything to maintain her family close and sane in the midst of polio and a man who forgot how to be a gentleman and a father.
I'm glad Carol got what she and Ellie deserved a second chance in this life, far away from a man who was not ready to love them only to cage them.
Overall it was a great book and story, I really enjoy it
Thank you NetGalley and Greenleaf Book Group, for the advanced copy of The Moments Between Dreams in exchange for my honest review.
Based in the 1940s, this book tells the tale of Carol, a housewife in Chicago who is intimidated by her husband who physically and verbally abuses her causing great heartache
She also experiences difficult times with her daughter who is diagnosed with polio - and she does her best to cope with extremely hard circumstances.
A very interesting read which makes you count your blessings