White Collar Girl, by Renée Rosen (2015)
White Collar Girl is set in the late 1950s and focuses on budding journalist Jordan Walsh. Jordan comes from a journalistic family – both her father and brother were journalists. After graduating from college with a degree in journalism, Jordan lands a job with the Chicago Tribune. She has dreams of landing an investigative position on the city desk, but women journalists were assigned to writing puff pieces. She is assigned to cover society weddings, cooking and other light “women’s interest” pieces.
Jordan’s brother had been killed in what was ostensibly a hit-and-run accident and the driver was never caught. His death plunges Jorden’s parents into a downward spiral. Jordan thinks there might be something to her brother’s death. She learns that he was investigating a horsemeat scandal when he was killed. Was his death related to a coverup?
As a young, new reporter, Jordan realized that she must pursue stories. She didn’t just settle for writing up the stories she was assigned but sought out stories. She befriends a source in government who passes on leads. Initially, the stories she writes are credited to her male co-workers.
The author attempts to put as many of Chicago’s scandals into this novel with Jordan being the investigative reporter. The stories that Jordan pursues are based on actual events that occurred in Chicago, but the time frames are not necessarily within the scope of this novel. The author did accurately portray the trials that a young female reporter would have encountered in the 1950s (some of which are probably still encountered today). Jordan being the reporter so single-minded just didn’t ring true.
In the 1960 Presidential election, President Kennedy narrowly won the election, and largely due to the results from Chicago. This novel discussed how the election was rigged and that Nixon probably did have the election stolen from him. Interestingly, White Collar Girl was published in 2015, before there was talk of the 2020 election being stolen.
I read Renée Rosen’s book The Social Graces and totally loved it, so wanted to read something else by this author. While White Collar Girl was good, it wasn’t as good as the first book I read by Rosen.
Read: January 17, 2022
3 Stars
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