Wired Love

English language

Published Dec. 26, 2019 by Standard Ebooks.

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4 stars (1 review)

Ella Cheever Thayer used her experience of being a telegraph operator at the Brunswick Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts, to write Wired Love: A Romance of Dots and Dashes. The story begins when Nathalie Rogers receives a call from another telegrapher, “C,” who manages to make her laugh. Little did they know, this was the beginning of an unusual romance (for the time period) between two people who don’t know anything about each other—not even what they look like. Wired Love was a bestseller for 10 years after it was published.

14 editions

Review of 'Wired Love' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Usually when I review a book from previous centuries, I have to preface it with warnings about the bits that are dated, weird, or offensive to modern sensibilities. No such preamble is needed here.

The book is a bit prescient in that it presents that unfolding of a romance between two people who first meet as operators over a telegraph wire. Maybe that's dated again because now when people meet online they often do know what each looks like. Still, the story, including the fascination of the unknown others, seemed to speak to experiences I've had with online friendships and would-be romances.

The structure of the story is the classic comedy-romance with multiple couples, mistaken intentions, mistaken identity, interfering others, and a happy ending. If you've read, for example, PG Wodehouse, the plot structure will feel familiar. I don't mean this to say it's boring, but rather that the structure …

Subjects

  • Love stories
  • Telegraphers -- Fiction