From School Library Journal
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Gr 5–8—At 100 years old, Martha O'Doyle decides to
record the story of the most eventful six-month period in her
life, a period that taught her to be the hero of her own story.
Expelled from catechism class in 1928 for questioning the story
of Adam and Eve, 12-year-old Martha takes a job as a maid in the
Sewell mansion, where her mother is housekeeper. Mr. Sewell is a
prominent newspaper magnate, and his supposedly "mad" wife Rose
is kept under lock and key in her room with her beloved
paintings. Martha is incredibly curious about Rose Sewell,
particularly after she escapes her room one night and nearly sets
fire to the mansion. She suspects Rose is trying to relay
messages through the paintings she chooses to send down to the
gallery, and Martha is determined to discover the truth about
Rose's "madness." With a narrative voice in Martha that is equal
parts pragmatic and wry, Fitzgerald weaves an engaging mystery
set in New York City in the Roaring Twenties. Rose's plight
challenges readers to think about gender inequity during the time
period, and they will be further encouraged by references to
stories such as that of Proserpina and Jupiter. Current events of
the day are incorporated into the plot, and an author's note
describes how the story grew from newspaper headlines,
biographies, and memoirs. VERDICT A solid, fast-moving mystery
for historical fiction fans, with nods to art history and
mythology.—Amanda Raklovits, Champaign Public Library, IL
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Review
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* "This lively and inventive mystery successfully
incorporates history, art, and literary classics...readers will
certainly be swept up by Martha’s pluck and the mystery’s many
layers."—Booklist, starred review
* "The combination of history, art, and mystery is sure to
delight readers...Between the well-written story and the cross
curricular possibilities, this is a book every library should
have.—School Library Connection, starred review
"A solid, fast-moving mystery for historical fiction fans, with
nods to art history and mythology."—School Library Journal
"Offer this to fans of Blue Balliett who like sophisticated
adventures."—Publishers Weekly
"Fitzgerald’s interest in art and history inform this puzzle of a
novel, with Jane Eyre, Sacco and Vanzetti, the dying art of
vaudeville, chemistry, and the 1929 stock market ces all
playing roles."—The Horn Book
"Young teens will enjoy [Martha's] impertinence and
determination, and may not even notice that they are learning a
little bit about the Sacco and Vanzetti trial and the 1928
presidential election, as well as the stock market c of
1929."—VOYA
"Martha is a scrappy, amiable narrator, and readers will be just
as invested as she is in seeing that all the wrongs in this
household are finally righted."—BCCB
Praise for Under the Egg:
Under the Egg is the winner of the New Atlantic Independent
Booksellers Association Best Middle Grade Book of the Year award!
"It's really a very compelling read and I don't know how she did
it."—Kate DiCamillo on NPR
* "A riveting narrative."—Booklist, starred review
* "Fans of Koningsburg's From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil
E. Frankweiler and Balliett's Chasing Vermeer will thrill at the
chance to solve a new mystery centered around art."—Library Media
Connection, starred review
"Laura Marx Fitzgerald creates the perfect adventure...any girl
will love this book."—Girls Life
"Uniquely readable, entirely charming, and a pleasure from start
to finish. Debuts this good are meant to be discovered."—School
Library Journal Fuse 8 Blog
"Riveting from start to finish."—BookPage
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About the Author
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Laura Marx Fitzgerald studied art history at Harvard
and Cambridge Universities. Her first book for young readers,
Under the Egg, won the New Atlantic Independent Booksellers
Association’s Middle Grade Book of the Year award. Laura lives in
Montclair, New Jersey.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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Chapter 2
September 1928
I learned early that if you ask an adult for the truth, usually
you get a story.
Sometimes two.
Take the story of my birth. My dad said that Ma labored brave and
hard all night with me all topsy-turvy in her belly—never leading
with my head, sure, nothing’s changed, he’d say—and that as I
finally made my way into the world, the dawn broke and light
streamed in through the window, sunbeams warming up both sets of
cheeks. And the doctor said I was the most beautiful baby he’d
ever delivered, and I should be named Aurora for the goddess of
the dawn, and Daddo still wishes that’s what they’d named me.
My ma said that’s malarkey, that I was born in the unnaturally
hot blaze of a May afternoon, with a single nurse and not a
doctor to be found for the likes of a poor mick like her, and how
would Daddo know anything about it when he was at the saloon the
whole time? And my name was always going to be Martha, for my
great-aunt Martha who paid my ma’s passage over from Ireland when
she was a girl.
Which one is true? Maybe both, probably neither.
So this time, I’m telling the story.
I mean, the truth.
Late September in Brooklyn can be delightful, with wisps of fall
in the air, or it can be as hot and muggy as August.
That was the kind of day it was when I sat in catechism class,
trying not to let Sister Ignatius see me scratching my sweaty
behind under my regulation wool tights. I had an idea that I
might sneak out and walk to the elevated train. I’d be at Coney
Island before French class even started, to la diablo with
Mademoiselle Flanagan.
I figured I could fake lady complaints and ask for a pass to the
nurse. Flanagan would think I was at the nurse’s office, and the
other girls would tell our last period calisthenics teacher I was
excused from exercises. As a plan, it couldn’t fail.
“Martha O’Doyle, I asked you a question.”
“May I go to the nurse, Sister?” I doubled over my desk. “It’s my
time.”
“Well, how apropos, as we were just talking about the Curse of
Eve. And wasn’t it the curse last week when I asked you to recite
the Second Lesson on God and His Perfections? And the week before
that when it was your turn to clap the erasers?”
I groaned louder and clutched my stomach.
“Or could this be your punishment for ignoring your studies last
night?”
I’d meant to memorize the Fifth Lesson after I fed, bathed, and
tucked my little brothers into their prayed-over bedsides. But
I’d heard on the way home that Declan Leary bet Jimmy Ratchett
that he could pull his dad’s Ford around the block with his
teeth. (He couldn’t.) So after the show, the boys and I wheedled
-splashed peanuts off of Dom Donovan’s speakeasy and hosed
off under a fire hydrant. By the time Ma got home from her job in
Manhattan, all she saw was a clean kitchen and wet heads on the
pillow.
So, no, there’d been no time to weigh the sins of Eve.
“So I will ask you again, Miss O’Doyle: How was Eve tempted to
sin? Speak from personal experience if you can’t remember the
details.”
The other girls giggled, damn them.
“Erm . . . a snake. No, a serpent.”
“Yes, Eve was tempted into sin by the Devil, who came in the form
of a snake and persuaded her to break God’s command. And that
command was?”
“To eat . . . I mean, not to eat the apple.”
“The fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. And which were the chief
causes that led Eve into sin?”
Now my stomach really did churn. Before bed I’d flicked through
an issue of Dime Detective, not the Bible. So I casted around for
words left over from her Quinlan’s homilies. Fruit. Sin.
Naked. Shame. Knowledge.
“Knowledge.”
“What about knowledge?”
“She—Eve—wanted to know. To know what God knew. What he forbade
her from knowing.”
“Yes, this was the primary sin: She admired what was forbidden
instead of shunning it. And the other—”
“Hold a tick,” I heard myself saying.
“What did you just say, Miss O’Doyle?”
“I mean, just a minute. Why was Eve punished for knowledge?
Ain’t—sorry, Sister—isn’t that what we’re all sent here to do?
Learn things?”
“Just like our spiritual parents, Adam and Eve,you are here to
learn the things God deemed fit and right to learn.”
“And how are you supposed to know that something’s not fit and
right until you, well, know it already? That’s a bit of a barn
door behind the horse. It just seems to me Eve got a bum rap is
all. Whoever wrote this thing—”
“This thing! Is that how you refer to the living Word of Our
Lord?”
“The Bible, I mean. Whoever wrote it sort of put it all on Eve.
Who can blame her for wanting to know some big secret like that?
And why does God point it out so much and then forbid it? I know
that if Ma tells my little brothers, ‘Don’t go eating the pie I
just made,’ I’ll find their fingers in it as soon as her back is
turned. Better to just hide it under the bed and let them wonder
why the place smells of cherries.”
“Martha Doyle, I warn you to stop talking this instant.”
Here’s the thing. Once I set to wondering something, my mind
skips straight ahead. Like my brothers running into traffic.
“And I don’t see how Adam is some great hero in this story. It’s
not like he took too much convincing to do the same thing Eve had
the guts to do first.14Why’d Eve get the curse? Why can’t boys
spend a week out of every month sitting on a rag bundle like the
rest of us?”
As I paused to contemplate Declan Leary and his gang complaining
of s, I caught of Sister Ignatius’s face. It resembled
a mushroom I once saw at a Chinatown market: squat, purple, and
bloated.
And I knew that, just like Eve, my wonderings had gotten me
expelled from what would—in retrospect—seem like Paradise.
“You think your schooling is some grand joke? Well, missy, you’re
about to get a taste of the life of labor. You’ll see what I’ve
been warning you about.”
My ma’s nasal Irish tones carried over the clacking of the
elevated train. She lectured her way over the Manhattan Bridge,
but I let my attention wander out the train window, to the boats
in the harbor, lit up by the early morning sun, and Lady Liberty
waving us over to the Manhattan side.
“Sit down properly, and stop your gawking out the window. Dear
me.” Ma shifted her address to the more general public as she
waved away a gust of dust. A gentleman next to us rushed to close
her window. Ma had that effect on people. She gave him a nod and
resettled her hat. “I’ve arranged a position under Mon-soor
Lerblanc, the cook. Lucky you we binned a kitchen maid this week.
Let’s see how a year washing pots and chopping onions compares to
a bit of study.”
Sister Ignatius had told my mother enough was enough, probably
with some Latin thrown in, and that I was a bad influence on my
fellow pupils at the Blessed Name of Our Holy Mother parish
school. Ma, no less formidable a force, was able to negotiate my
expulsion down to a year’s withdrawal, with a conditional seat
the following fall, assuming I’d learned my lesson.
What lesson, my mother was happy to spell out in vivid detail. My
school uniform was handed in, and the evening care and keeping of
the twins was entrusted to our downstairs lodger, Mrs.
Annunziata, for a reduction in rent and all the cheeks she could
pinch. I would be going to work with my mother at the Fifth
Avenue mansion where she was the head housekeeper.
My ma’s job was a good one, all said. She’d gone to work there
when my dad returned to the road. Daddo was a vaudeville star,
performing his act around the country, selling out houses to the
rafters. But due to shifty bookers and managers, he was always
chasing his pay, and it fell on Ma to make ends meet.
With her extra wages, my ma had managed to get us a tidy house in
Brooklyn with room for a lodger. And ever since the mansion’s
butler left, my ma had been in charge of the whole staff, even
the footmen, which was quite the accomplishment back then. But as
her employer said, “Why not? It’s running a house, not running
for president.”
Her employer was Mr. J. Archer Sewell, a big- type who owned
a newspaper. My mother’s face always lit up when she described
him to me.
“A true gentleman, Mr. Sewell is. Generous not just to me, but to
all the staff. At Christmas, all the housemaids were given hair
combs with real crystals, and the footmen got silk suspenders.
And a ham. All paid for out of Mr. Sewell’s pocket.”
I couldn’t imagine some ham and fripperies made much of a dent in
a millionaire’s pocket, but Ma had momentarily forgotten my
shortcomings, so I held my tongue.
“How lucky that you were born in America! Back when I worked at a
grand house in Ireland, the maids were expected to turn their
faces to the wall when the employer walked by! There’s a fine
how-de-do. But not Mr. Sewell. We’re all ‘part of the team,’ he
says, from the lowest scullery maid all the way up to the top.”
She smiled; the top was her.
“Sounds like quite a large staff for a bachelor. What’s he need
all those maids for?”
Ma sniffed. “One of the largest houses on the avenue requires a
full staff, and as it is, we are quite short-handed. Just two
housemaids to clean a ballroom, dining room, art gallery, not to
mention all the bedrooms. And a footman with nothing to do but
open the door now and then.” She tsked her tongue, for Ma hated
nothing more than idleness.
I was just about to ask after my duties in the kitchen when she
spoke again. “He’s not a bachelor, exactly.”
“Who?”
“Mr. Sewell, of course. He has a wife. Quite ill, though.”
“What’s wrong with her? She got gout?”
That was the only rich people’s disease I could think of.
“Nothing with her body. It’s her mind. She’s . . .”
“A loony?”
Ma looked down her nose at me. “An invalid. A nervous type. She
has strange fears and reactions to things. She doesn’t leave her
rooms.”
“What, ever?”
“In a few years, I believe.”
“A few years!”
“Shhhhhh!” Ma’s eyes darted around the train car, but the
commuters were mostly snoring or absorbed in the morning
headlines. “The most important thing a servant brings to a job
is—”
“I know, the apron.”
I held mine up. “I went back for it, remember?”
“You must do something about this habit of interrupting. I was
going to say: discretion. Mr. Sewell depends on us to attend to
Mrs. Sewell, to keep her calm and comfortable, and above all to
keep her out of trouble. And the papers, for that matter.”
“I don’t see how anyone could make the papers if they never leave
the house.”
Ma chuckled. Chuckled, mind you. At home she was tired and
irritable, put out over an upset water jug or the twins’ boots in
the doorway. But when she talked about this other house, this
other family, she was—well, different. Assured. Animated. Even
happy.
“Miss Rose—I mean, Mrs. Sewell—used to be quite the scandal
maker. I remember one time—”
“Hold the phone, did you know her then?”
“You may say ‘I beg your pardon,’ and before I rose to
housekeeper, I was her lady’s maid, back when she was Rose
Pritchard. Miss Rose was what they call ‘new money,’ or her
her was, at least. A fortune dug out of the West Virginia coal
mines and built into a railroad. Mr. Pritchard used that money to
move to New York, buy their place in society: all the best
schools, the big house, the right parties. Every privilege in the
world, and Rose didn’t give two figs for any of it. She was
always looking for trouble—and finding it, I might add.” And Ma
chuckled that chuckle again.
“This Rose sounds like a spoiled brat,” I mumbled.
I thought Ma would jump to her charge’s defense, but instead she
seemed to weigh my comment. “She was, somewhat. They were the
sort of shenanigans you’d see from the girls on the lane,
sneaking out to nightclubs and such. But it was more than that.
It was like she was trying to prove something to her her.
There he’d gone to all that time and money to give her the place
in society he’d never had. But all she wanted was to prove she
could make herself from nothing, like him.
“Like the time she told us she was doing charity work at one of
the settlements downtown, when really she was working in a
sweatshop, learning to sew neckties. ‘Learning the business from
the ground up,’ she said, before her her put a stop to it.
Then she ran off to Paris, living with unsavory types, buying
their pictures; she swore they were20worth something. And oh!” Ma
laughed again. “The capers! Like the time she dressed like a
gypsy woman and stood outside begging money off her her’s
dinner guests. By the time dessert had been cleared, she burst
in, cling she’d turned the money three times over at the
track. This, at a time when her her’s company was failing its
investors. Oh, Mr. Pritchard was furious!”
“So, what happened?”
“What happens to most girls, same as me. She got married. She
settled, eventually. And then—”
Her smile faded, and her face sank back into the lines I knew so
well. “It all seemed harmless, back then.”
Then the train went dark, plunging underground as we reached the
Manhattan side of the river.
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