The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett. New York: Spiegel & Grau, 2026. 638 pages. *****
Not for the faint of heart, it's a hefty 638 pages and well worth it. It's been 17 years since her last novel, The Help was published and The Calamity Club has the same feel to it. It's 1933 in Oxford, Mississippi rich and poor are struggling with financial losses while trying to maintain societal expectations. Eleven-year-old Meg, abandoned by her mother on Christmas Eve, resides at the Lafayette County Orphan Asylum. Unmarried Birdie is visiting her social-climbing sister to ask for financial help to keep their family home. Birdie helps at the Orphanage while working up the courage to ask for money, only to discover that her sister's situation isn't what it seems. Charlie is working hard to redefine herself and build a new life as a mother. Birdie and Charlie come together under unusual circumstances to earn as much money as they can to benefit their families. It's legal if everyone consents and no one finds out, right?
I loved this story and didn't want it to end, expect it to be a block buster movie. You'll laugh, cry and cheer. Stockett can make absurd situations seem plausible. Championing the cause that with women working together, all things are possible. In reading other reviews, they are mixed both for the length of the novel and some of the family situations introduced. You will have to read it to decide for yourself, however, it's 5 starts for me!
From her website - "Kathryn Stockett was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi. After graduating from the University of Alabama, she moved to New York City, where she worked in magazine publishing and marketing for nine years. Her first novel, The Help, has sold over 15 million copies worldwide." For more info https://www.kathrynstockettauthor.com/.
#bookstagram #historicalfiction #mississippifiction
No comments:
Post a Comment