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Summary of City of Girls
spoilers follow In Elizabeth Gilbert’s 2019 historical fiction novel, City of Girls, our narrator is 89-year-old Vivian Morris. In the opening pages, we learn that Vivian is writing to another woman named Angela. Vivian is attempting to answer Angela’s question about who Vivian was to her late father. Vivian begins her letter in response by immersing us in her youth, starting when she moves to New York City at the age of 19 in 1940. Having been kicked out of college, Vivian lives with her bohemian Aunt Peg, who owns a vaudeville-style theater in Midtown Manhattan called the Lily Playhouse with her business and romantic partner, Olive. Vivian enjoys the glamorous life of the showgirls she befriends, in particular her roommate Celia, and experiences nights of excess, gluttony, and sexual pleasure. By day, she crafts beautiful costumes for the Lily using material from a fabric emporium where she strikes up a friendship with Marjorie, the quirky daughter of the store’s owners. As the Second World War begins to break through Vivian’s sheltered life, Edna Parker Watson, an English stage actress and friend of Aunt Peg and Olive, becomes stranded in New York as England gets into the war. Aunt Peg puts on a show to feature Edna with the help of Billy, her husband who lives in L.A. The show is a critical and commercial success, and the cast and crew narrowly survives Billy’s work-hard, play-hard mentality. One night, tensions between Edna and her husband Arthur erupt, and Vivian is caught in a threesome with Arthur and Celia. Olive manages to keep Vivian’s name out of the press coverage of the scandal, but the damage is done. Edna scolds Vivian, telling her she isn’t an interesting woman, and Vivian flees the city, getting a ride home with her responsible Navy recruit older brother, Walter, and a fellow solider who has a car available. On the way home, Walter lectures Vivian, and the unnamed solder calls her a “dirty little whore,” a remark that fills Vivian with shame and self-hatred as she lives at home with her parents in a state of depression. Vivian narrowly misses a marriage to Jim Larsen, an employee at her father’s company, because Jim enlists in the military after the Pearl Harbor attacks. Vivian senses that she’s dodged a bullet and a life of unhappiness with Jim. When Aunt Peg drives up to her parents’ house and asks Vivian to return to the city, Vivian eagerly hears her out. Aunt Peg’s been commissioned to put on shows at the Brooklyn Navy Yard and needs a costume designer. Vivian agrees and, with delight, moves back to the Lily. Life has changed, with Edna on Broadway, Celia gone, and Billy elsewhere. Vivian dives headfirst into the challenge of creating costumes despite war shortages. Vivian is distraught when she finds out Walter died on a ship in the Pacific. After the war, Vivian and Marjorie purchase a house and set up a bridal gown boutique. Marjorie has a son who Vivian helps to raise, and Vivian finds sexual satisfaction in multiple male partners, though never a lasting relationship. When the Brooklyn Navy Yard is set to be formally closed down, Aunt Peg is asked to put on one last show. Since Peg is too weak from illness, Vivian agrees to take on the project. After the performance, a scarred police officer comes up to her and makes a stunning confession: he was the soldier who drove her home and called her a “dirty little whore.” The man’s name is Frank, and though he tries to apologize and apologize for the regretful words that have haunted him since, Vivian shuts him down and leaves. Seeking sympathy from Aunt Peg, Vivian is surprised when Peg expresses disappointment in her. Olive tells Vivian she needs to stand in the “field of honor” and take the high ground. After much deliberation, Vivian reaches out to Frank. Together, they strike up an unusual friendship that borders on a platonic romance. Since Frank’s PTSD makes him uncomfortable inside, they walk through the city during long nights. Vivian helps him process some of his trauma. He eventually introduces her to his daughter, Angela, the woman to whom Vivian is writing. Vivian designs Angela’s wedding gown. Not long after, Frank dies. When Angela writes to Vivian, it’s to tell her that her mother has passed away and that she was always curious about Vivian’s close relationship with Frank. In closing, Vivian offers her friendship to Angela, looking back on her long and mostly happy life with extraordinary women.
10 City of Girls Book Club Questions
Ready to give your book club something to talk about? Use these City of Girls book club questions to get the discussion going.
4 Ways to Theme Your City of Girls Book Club Discussion
Elizabeth Gilbert’s City of Girls is an inspiring choice for book clubs. Here are three ways to theme your book club’s discussion of City of Girls:
City of Girls: Further Reading
If you’re looking for more on Elizabeth Gilbert’s books, we’ve got an essential guide to “The Best Elizabeth Gilbert Books.” And if historical fiction is your jam, be sure to read our TBR-expanding list of “50 of the Best Historical Fiction Books.” Need more book discussion club questions or ideas? Check out more of Book Riot’s book club coverage:
“40 Great Book Club Discussion Questions for Any Book” “19 Unique and Totally Awesome Themed Book Club Ideas” “25 Nonfiction Suggestions for Your Book Club” “20 of the Best Book Club Books for 2020”
For more book club discussion guides of other interesting books, read Book Riot’s:
“10 Book Club Questions for Where the Crawdads Sing“ “There, There Book Club Questions” “10 Circe Book Club Questions: A Reading Guide for Madeline Miller’s Novel”