cover image The Woman Who Saved the Children: A Biography of Eglantyne Jebb, Founder of Save the Children

The Woman Who Saved the Children: A Biography of Eglantyne Jebb, Founder of Save the Children

Claire Mulley. Oneworld (NBN, dist.), $16.95 trade paper (388p) ISBN 978-1-85168-722-0

Mulley's fascinating biography of Jebb is an in-depth look at life in England in the early 1920s. Born in 1876 and raised in a Shropshire home, Jebb inherited her parents' keen sense of social justice and personal social responsibility. Jebb and her sister, Dorothy, moved to Cambridge in the early 1900s, into what was then the middle of a liberal welfare movement. It was during this pivotal historical time that Jebb began to champion her cause with the belief that social justice is a civil right and not just a benevolent gift. Motivation for Jebb's pioneering acts may have come from her 1913 visit to the Balkans, where she witnessed the post-WWI devastation that would torment her until the end of her life. In her continued drive to create a better social order as well as individual child welfare, Jebb helped form Save the Children, which would forever change the idea of child welfare. Unfortunately, Mulley's book is exhausting in its detail, creating a nagging urge to put it down and walk away. Mulley often interrupts her narrative's intensity with simpering insertions of personal history; and her "baby on board" comparison to Jebb's belief that children are especially vulnerable to abuse and neglect, for example, is embarrassing. (Oct.)