Member Reviews

“ ‘Go on Pretending’ is the truth about a variety of real-life events and real-life characters as seen through the eyes of imaginary people. It is as honest of a story as possible to create…while pretending.”

-Alina Adams

In 1939, seventeen year old idealist Rose Janowitz volunteered for the International Abraham Lincoln Brigade, to defend Madrid during this Spanish Civil War. “She had been eagerly anticipating the opportunity…to prove herself an equal of the brave women who’d come before her.” To this end, Rose trained in weaponry and was prepared to fight. The commanders were unwilling to use women as combatants. Rose rebelled “in the midst of a rebellion.” The war ended before she was able to engage militarily.

After returning to New York City and finishing her education, she applied for a job at the corporate offices of the Procter & Gamble Company and met with Irna Phillips, “the woman who had single-handedly invented radio soap operas in the 1950s. Irna needed a supervising producer. All scripts would continue to be created solely by Irna. She stated, “Films end…If you make a bad decision in a film…it stays forever. Serials offer chance after chance to get life right daily…”. Presently, soap operas were broadcast over the radio. A new role of a ne-er-do-well was being cast by Rose. She chose Columbia educated Jonas Cain, sight unseen, after hearing his smooth voice and excellent interpretation of a script. It was a gutsy decision adding a Black actor to the cast. Just as silent movie actors sometimes did not transition well to the small screen, the American public was not ready to accept Jonas in the infancy of television. For the longest time, Rose and Jonas had to pretend their burgeoning love was non-existent. Any attempts to create a new vehicle for Jonas was met with resistance. Irna Phillips, with her protege Agnes Nixon were the pioneers of the soap opera world.

In 1957, Rose and Jonas accepted an invitation to the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students held in Moscow, having written a script to showcase Jonas’ acting talent and Rose’s directorial abilities. Being lauded in Moscow was a far cry from their experiences as an interracial couple in the US. They married and settled in the USSR accepting the perception that “every worker was an equal…” A television satellite discussion highlighting the lives of Rose and Jonas after 30 years in the USSR painted a rosy picture. Rose’s pretense would emerge full of holes.

Raised in Moscow, Rose and Jonas’ daughter Emma married and traveled to the US with her husband. What a surprise! Emma might wear her hair many different ways, not just in braids. Harlem boasted residents that looked like her. She discovered jazz and poetry readings. Circling back to Rose’s initial determination to embrace a cause, her granddaughter joined the Women’s revolution in Syria in 2012.

“Go on Pretending” was written by Alina Adams who immigrated to the US from the USSR in the 1970s. It seemed that watching soap operas was one of the ways to learn and increase English vocabulary. After 25 years, P&G Studios will soon be releasing a new soap opera about “a powerful and prestigious multi-generational family…that is Black Royalty.” This remarkable novel denoting 1950s segregation, the collapse of the USSR and the Women’s Revolution in Rojava is masterfully detailed in this intergenerational historical novel of three women trying to navigate a path of freedom and self-worth. Kudos to Alina Adams!

Thank you Alina Adams and Colin Mustful @ History Through Fiction for the print ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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