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Paperback The Persian Pickle Club Book

ISBN: 0312147015

ISBN13: 9780312147013

The Persian Pickle Club

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

It is the 1930s, and hard times have hit Harveyville, Kansas, where the crops are burning up, and there's not a job to be found. For Queenie Bean, a young farm wife, a highlight of each week is the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Friendship is Stitched in Love

Set in the depression era when times are rough, Friendship will get you through. This quilting circle has lots to share with each gathering, but there is one story that hasn’t been shared. True Friendship Will Get You Through.

Paisley will never be the same again

My second venture into the writing of Sandra Dallas took me to Harleyville, Kansas, again in the depression era, and into the lives of the farm community there with its tightly knit quitting club. My curiosity about the title of Dallas' book led me in, and once again I discovered her artful way of meshing a group of women, friends by community links, and introducing a mystery that seems dangerous to solve. Queenie and Grover are the rocks of the novel's community. But Rita's determination drives the story to a surprising solution. I wondered if this book would in any way link to Butte and the location of Dallas' first book. I was delighted to know that it did, in the most subtle of ways. I believe that Sandra Dallas knows what makes for good reading for women. I highly recommend this book as well as her first. Her obvious knowledge of people makes her characters both real and memorable. A comfortable read.

What's in a name?

As a hook, the title is sufficiently intriguing to entice readers to this book. The "Persian Pickle" is Kansas jargon for the paisley pattern; a piece of paisley fabric is cherished there by a group of women who regularly get together to make quilts, just as their mothers had done before them and they expect their own daughters to do in turn. This is a short book dense with emotion and import. The characterizations are excellent and the writing is lyrical. The Pickle ladies do more than quilt, of course, they comfort and support one another through all of life's vageries. Since the story is set during the Depression, there are plenty of tough times for them to rise above and, in fact, they accept those hardships with grace. When the bride of a local farmer's son joins them, their insularity and unthinking acceptance of their community's rhythms gets held up for examination through her far more worldly eyes. The picture painted by Sandra Dallas is a detailed one of life on the prairie at the beginning of modern times. The women are real enough to feel like a reader's friends, and the book--and the relationship--ends much too quickly. But the story has been told, the secret the ladies shared revealed. In the greatest tribute to any author, the tale lingers on in the mind of her reader. And in the process, Dallas' readers even learn quite a bit about the fine art of quilting!

A lovely period mystery, and so much more.

A truly serendipitous find. Initially attracted by the book's title, I could not tear myself away until I had finished reading it. I often think that the best books are those that transcend/defy genre classification, and 'The Persian Pickle Club'certainly does this, with its assorted elements of fictional slice-of-life tale, mystery, comedy, tragedy, and philosophical questioning of the fundamental nature of right and wrong.Set in a small town in Depression-era Kansas, the novel's plot revolves around the lives and relationships of the members of a multi-generational women's quilting group. Through Ms. Dallas' deft handling of language, character development and detail, the reader is transported to this other time and place as these wonderful women support one another in facing life's various joys and curveballs -- friendship, love, marriage, infertility, death, economic difficulties, etc. And, if all of the foregoing were not enough, there is an intriguing murder mystery thrown in, the resolution of which underscores the very special nature of friendship between women.My only regret is that this book had to end. Don't delay -- read it soon, and pass it on. Like a good friendship, it is something to be savored and shared.

Even better than "Diary of Mattie Spenser!"

I picked this novel up right after finishing Dallas' "The Diary of Mattie Spenser" (my first experience with Dallas -- loved it!). So, I was extremely happy to discover that Persian Pickle is even BETTER than "D of M S"! This one is set in a small rural Kansas town during the Depression, where a close-knit community is struggling against the hard times together. The women are particularly close as they all belong to a quilting club they call "The Persian Pickle Club" (I'll let you read the book to find out what a "persian pickle" is). Their quiet town is shaken up a little when the son of one of the local farmers returns, bringing his fiery new wife Rita with him. Rita aspires to be a journalist so she can get a job in the city (she hates farming) and when the bones of a man are found buried in a field, she jumps at the chance to get the scoop. Her investigation, however, brings her dangerously close to a secret the Pickles (who by this time have come to adore Rita and have made her a member of the club despite the fact she's wretched at quilting) have sworn to keep. She eventually has to decide whether her loyalties lie with her career goals or with her new friends. The characters in this story are wonderful (in fact, the narrator of this one, Queenie Bean, reminded me a lot of Mattie Spenser, which is a good thing) and by the end I was actually very envious of their friendships and their community (born too late). I highly, highly recommend this and can't wait to read the one remaining Dallas novel I haven't gotten to yet (forgot the title). I'm thinking I'll save it, though, as her next book isn't due out until October, 2000.

That's the way it was

My grandparents and great-grandparents, the Butlers and the Fouts, owned farms probably on the exact land Sandra Dallas places her story. I spent many a summer break helping out on the farm. The pickle club so matches the politeness, rhythm, dialect, and pace of my grandmother's and the extended families' speech that I cried at the rememberences. The stories "Bean", as my grandfather was known (omigosh, "Queenie Bean" a coincidence?), and my father told me of growing up in the depression echoed the sincere care, concern, and poverty-stricken generosity neighbors shared during that time.How the ladies treated Rita and strangers is exactly the way my great-aunts would act. Even the phrases of speech must be verbatim remembrances from Ms. Dallas' research. Knowing my relatives from the depression generation, the solution to the mystery is quite conceivable.The story was a pleasant read but obviously I saw nuances in it that the normal reader cannot appreciate. Trust me, Sandra has done an awesome job of describing the people and the period in the flint hills area outside Topeka. One should read this book to truly understand our mid-American heritage and character. The plot is just a vehicle to get to that knowledge.
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