Montauk by

Montauk

For three months, this humble fishing village will serve as the playground for New York City’s wealthy elite. For Beatrice Bordeaux, a college educated farm girl from rural Pennsylvania, her focus is reconnecting with her banker husband Harry. Instead, she’ll be spending twelve weeks sequestered with other high society wives at The Montauk Manor - a two-hundred room seaside hotel - while her husband dallies in his “extra-curricular activities.”

As Bea drifts further from the Manhattanites and towards Montauk’s natural beauty and community spirit, she finds herself drawn to a man nothing like her husband. Finally able to feel her original self emerging, Bea is alive once again... But those moments may be fleeting as fate conspires to tear her whole world apart.

Reviewed by pagesbycyndy on

4 of 5 stars

Share

My Review Of


Montauk



Enter into the world of 1938 where women in society were as successful only as their husbands were. A world of yesteryear when Montauk was just starting to become more than a fishing town. Montauk is where the very elite and snobbish Park Avenue families went to spend the summer, that is the ladies and children did during the week while the men, ahem.... worked, in the city all week and joined their families on weekends.
This book reads like a historical romance with some women's rights issues thrown in as well as briefly touching on the horrible ant-semitism of that particular era.

We meet Bea, a college educated, raised modestly country girl in Pennsylvania who lost her brother Charlie in a tragic accident when she was 15. Bea is not comfortable in this world and I love how Bea constantly stands up to the ladies who tennis and lunch. Bea quickly makes friends with Dolly, a woman ahead of her times, a bit loose,somewhat brash but a true friend when Bea needs her. Now let's talk about Bea's faithless cad of a husband Harry, selfish, drinks too much and womanizes whomever he wants because after all Harry feels that this is his right. Dolly shows Bea the ropes and how to pretend to fit in with these snobbish boring women. Bea becomes entangled in the lives of the locals and enters into a forbidden relationship with a mysterious man who seems just a bit familiar to her.

I loved how Bea becomes a woman in her own right, finds her voice and rallies against all that she is supposed to be in this era. While Harry was a horrible husband to Bea, somehow I just coud not bring myself to dislike him, I actually pitied him. This is a very well written historical romance with a lot of drama, a bit of intrigue and just full of scandal and secrets. All of this set against the beautiful backdrop of Montauk's yesteryear.This review was originally posted on Fictional Reviewer

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 28 May, 2019: Finished reading
  • 28 May, 2019: Reviewed