It was the title and the cover that first drew me to this book - it's not one that I would normally go for (although I do like fictional autobiographies; Memoirs of a Geisha, Empress Orchid, The Help etc) as the first person narrative really immerses you in the story.
In this case though it happened to be telling the truth.
My Notorious Life is a work of fiction, very loosely based on the life of Ann Trow, otherwise known as Madame Restell, an abortionist working in New York in the mid-late 1880's. Manning's heroine is a rapscallion urchin, foul mouthed and impoverished, scampering around the streets of New York in the mud and waste, caring for her younger brother and sister whilst her mother lies ill in bed after an accident in the factory where she works. Her name is Ann (Axie) Muldoon, a fire cracker with a deep sense of Irish identity and familial loyalty.
Axie and her brother (Joe) and sister (Dutch) have a chance encounter with a children's aid worker who sends them on a train to the countryside with other orphans (despite Axie's protestations). On the journey they meet Charlie, a boorish yet charming orphan boy who has a tempestuous relationship with Axie. To Axie's horror, once they reach the countryside she is forcibly sepearated from her siblings and when no suitable adoptive parents can be found for her, sent back to New York with Charlie.
Once there events rapidly escalate for Axie until she finds herself apprenticed to a female midwife and learning all the tricks of the trade for female health, fertility, and the occassional removal of an 'obstruction'. Years pass, she meets Charlie again, they court and marry. She writes on a regular basis to her sister, hearing stories back about Dutch's good fortune, the balls she is attending, the French she is learning and the dresses she is wearing. There is no word of her brother.
After the death of her mentor and teacher, Axie and her husband live in poverty with no source of income. In desperation, Axie makes up 6 bottles of women's remedy (not to be taken when pregnant as it may cause the woman to loose the child) and sells them on the streets. She makes a small profit and gradually she and Charlie build up an huge enterprise. Axie, under the alias Madame DeBeausacq becomes a midwife, seller of female remedies, educator for women on the secrets of their bodies and occasional abortionist at a time when often another child meant a death sentence for the mother and hunger for the family. However, a midwife as successful as Axie, who resides in grandeur and wealth, could not remain completely unnoticed by the authorities. Dubbed Madame X by the newspaper, the vilest and most corrupt woman in New York, all too soon she finds herself hounded by the man who has vowed to destroy her, Anthony Comstock, the founder of the Society for the Suppression of Vice.
The language style is engrossing and once I was 50 pages in, I could not put this book down. Manning immerses you completely in this period in history, the sights, sounds and smells of the streets, the midwifery clinic, the back parlour where Axie and Charlie sell their Women's Lunar Remedy in the early days of their marriage surround you. I finished it in a few days, muttering 'Just one more chapter' late at night as poor Steve was trying to sleep, unwilling to put the book down as I traveled with Axie on her journey from 13 year old untamed wild creature to 33 year old infamous female medical practitioner.
Highly recommended.