This book was incredible! I actually teared up at the end, which I hardly ever do.
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City of Girls is structured as a letter, with the main character Vivian Morris writing to someone we know is named Angela. Part of what kept me hooked on this book is Angela's relation to the story is not revealed until the very end. Vivian's letter tells the story of her life, beginning at age 19 when she first moves to New York City. The tale moves effortlessly through time, and I truly enjoyed Vivian's unique perspective on her experience during World War II. Her honest account of her activities at a young girl in New York City were enthralling. Her honesty in assessment of her relationships, actions, and mistakes and that time made me reflect of my own choices and relationships. Vivian also expressed a unique trait which I found to be important: her willingness to let relationships be what they are, and to not ask anything more of them. In my own life I find myself wanting to make more out of relationships than they are, and this was an important less for me.
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Vivian is also an icon of feminism. In a time where women were expected to be married and with children by 20, Vivian follows her own path to satisfaction, unconcerned with the pressures of society.