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Bleeding Kansas by Sara Paretsky
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Bleeding Kansas (edition 2008)

by Sara Paretsky

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6532535,466 (3.22)22
The late-twentieth-century descendants of anti-slavery emigrants worry about maintaining religious superiority over a rival family while launching a harassment campaign against a Wiccan newcomer, an effort that is challenged by a young man's military service.
Member:terran
Title:Bleeding Kansas
Authors:Sara Paretsky
Info:Putnam Adult (2008), Hardcover, 448 pages
Collections:Your library, Read but unowned
Rating:**
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Bleeding Kansas by Sara Paretsky

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» See also 22 mentions

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Book on CD. About how four farm families were connected by events-wiccans, religion, family tragedy and a sacred red calf.
  bentstoker | Jan 26, 2024 |
(2008)(audio)Very good. The author gets to rant about people's inhumanity and bigotry under the guise of a story about characters living in her homeland. Lara, Jim and Susan Grellier are the heroes as they struggle against prejudice and grief. Paretsky, who has tackled weighty issues in her V.I. Warshawski detective series (e.g., the Holocaust in Total Recall), weaves a gripping contemporary novel around three farm familiesĄthe Grelliers, Fremantles and SchapensĂ‚ÂĄthat can trace their Kaw Valley, Kans., roots back to the 1850s, a time of violent clashes between antislavery and proslavery forces in Bleeding Kansas. Their shared history is no buffer against the storm of changes that begin with the arrival of Gina Haring, a lesbian Wiccan. Chip Grellier, after being expelled from high school, enlists in the army and is killed in Iraq with devastating effects on his family. The Schapens' fundamentalist doctrines come to the fore when they discover a perfect red heifer in their dairy herd that may be a path to riches as well as to the second coming. Meanwhile, Gina stirs prejudices and passions to a fever pitch. Paretsky taps a different vein and strikes gold in this timely tale of fear and conflict in heartland America.
  derailer | Jan 25, 2024 |
I wasn't sure about this book when I started but soon I was there as the wiccans danced around the fire, I cursed Junior and his 'church' , and his grandmother. I stood by Elaine, cheering as she tweeted Myra's nose. The book stirred up a lot of emotions and I often found myself holding my breath in anticipation of what would happen next. ( )
  wearylibrarian | Aug 27, 2016 |
I am a big fan of Paretsky’s Warshaski novels although it’s taken me a while to get round to reading her non-Warshawski novels. I read Ghost Country while at Bloodstock, a metal festival, last year, and thought it very good. Bleeding Kansas is… less good. It’s apparently based in part on Paretsky’s own teen years in Kansas, before she moved to Chicago; and, I suspect, although I rather hope not, based on the people she knew from that time. Because they are pretty much all mean-minded and prejudiced Bible bashers (is there any other sort?). Especially one family, who use their faith to justify all manner of bigotry and nastiness. The story focuses on Lara Grellier, the teenage daughter of one of the farming families in the Kaw River Valley. Her mother Susan is fascinated by a Grellier ancestor, who helped slaves during the Civil War, and survived several attacks by Quantrill and other pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” (the title of the novel refers to that period), but has a mental breakdown after the death of her son in Iraq. A lesbian Wiccan from Chicago has just taken over the dilapidated mansion of the local, deceased, gentry; and the Schapen family, mean-spirited relious types to a person, have accidentally bred a pure-red heifer which an apocalyptic Jewish sect from Chicago want in order to to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem. Meanwhile, everyone else tries to get by, without being too hateful – at which they don’t always succeed – or too liberal, which would of course see them tarred and feathered and driven out of the county. I really don’t have any sympathy for people who think their religion excuses their appalling behaviour (I’m looking at you, North Carolina), and I’m really not interested in reading about such people. It’s to Paretsky’s credit that she’s even-handed in her treatment of her caste of bigots and idiots, but that does make you wonder why she wrote the book in the first place. Yes, Warshawski is a champion and plays a champion’s role, and that’s part of the character’s appeal – so it seems self-evident that to go against type would result in characters most of Paretsky’s readers are going find unlikeable, and so create a novel most would find a less-than-enjoyable read. The Amazon reviews, interestingly, seem evenly split among the stars ratings, on both UK and US sites. ( )
  iansales | Apr 21, 2016 |
I listened to the book on Audio CD. It was okay but I couldn't seem to get into it as much as I wanted to. I would recommend. ( )
  lacey.tucker | Mar 10, 2016 |
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Epigraph
The promised peace has not yet come to Kansas. With many fears, and many sufferings before them in the cold months coming, they will look forward to a day of deliverance, when the new reign of peace and righteous laws takes the place of oppression and tyranny.

- Mrs. Sara Robinson, Kansas, 1856
Dedication
For Nicholas, Jonathan, Daniel, and Jeremy
Fellow refugees from our own patch of bleeding Kansas
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Heat devils shimmered over the cornfield.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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The late-twentieth-century descendants of anti-slavery emigrants worry about maintaining religious superiority over a rival family while launching a harassment campaign against a Wiccan newcomer, an effort that is challenged by a young man's military service.

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