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Loading... Prayers for Saleby Sandra Dallas
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Hennie Comfort has spent seventy years of her life living in the mining town of Middle Swan high up in the Rocky Mountains. She moved there shortly after the Civil War and now it is the time of the Great Depression. Nit Spindle is seventeen, married and newly arrived in town. Young Nit notices the old sign on Hennie’s fence that reads “Prayers for Sale” and Nit wants to buy one. The two are drawn to each other and into a fast friendship as Nit learns how to adapt to her new home from the many tales that Hennie has to share. This was a lovely novel of love earned, friendship shared, and redemption found. It made me want to pick up a needle at Hennie’s quilt frame and bask in the warmth of friendship. Very nice, compelling story of friendship between Hennie, who, at 86, contemplates leaving Middle Swan to live with her daughter, and Nit, the newly-wed newcomer. As their friendship deepens, Hennie shares her stories of people and the passage of time in that hard rock, hard luck area. Entertaining, interesting and surprisingly touching. Eighty-six-year-old Hennie Comfort is starting to feel old. She knows it is time to start spending at least the winter months at her daughter’s home in the milder climate of Fort Madison, Iowa, rather than in her own home high in the Rockies where she has spent most of the last seventy winters. Middle Swan, Colorado, is a gold mining town and, considering the depth of the Depression, its residents are happy to have the steady work, dangerous though that work might be. Hennie is wise enough to know that once she settles in Iowa she might have neither the health nor the energy needed to return to the Colorado high country. She finds the possibility that her new, more static, lifestyle might speed her aging process, or stifle her will to remain active, to be a depressing one because she is not ready to say “deep enough” to Middle Swan. It is the unexpected appearance of seventeen-year-old Nit Spindle, who hopes to start a new life with her young husband in Middle Swan, that gives Hennie a new sense of purpose as she prepares herself to leave the town. The two first meet when Nit stops to ponder the “Prayers for Sale” signed attached to the fence in front of Hennie’s house. Not realizing that the sign is a sentimental joke, the young woman offers Hennie her last nickel for a prayer. Hennie refuses the money, offers to say the prayer for nothing, and invites Nit inside where the two women begin to forge the remarkable bond both will come to cherish. On the one hand, Hennie, who arrived in Middle Swan at about the same age as Nit, sees much of herself in Nit Spindle and she remembers full well how difficult it was for her to fit into such a strange new place. On the other, Nit, desperately lonely and far from her Kentucky home for the first time in her life, senses in Hennie the kindness of someone willing to help ease her into her new life. "Prayers for Sale" is the story of a deep friendship between two very different women. One of them is old enough to have lost family during the Civil War, and the other has come of age more than sixty years later during America’s Great Depression. Hennie Comfort is a born storyteller and, to Nit, it seems that she has accumulated a never ending supply of fascinating stories during her long life. It is through Hennie’s stories and advice that Nit learns the skills needed to thrive in her new environment, and telling the stories gives Hennie the sense that she is completing the circle she began some seventy years earlier when she climbed out of the wagon that brought her to Middle Swan. Sandra Dallas has created two memorable characters in Hennie Comfort and Nit Spindle – she even manages to surround them with a circle of women the reader will remember for a long time. But what make "Prayers for Sale" special are the stories through which Hennie Comfort reveals her life story a little at a time, right up to the present day when she is finally ready to say “deep enough” to her old life. I will not soon forget Hennie Comfort, her mountain lore, or her stories, and I suspect that Nit Spindle and her husband held Hennie’s memory close for the rest of their lives. "Prayers for Sale" is a very fine character-driven novel. Rated at: 4.0 Hennie Comfort was a strong woman who lived most of her 86 years in the high country of Colorado in a rough mining town. She developed the ability to quilt and tell the stories of the town and its people. They aren't always pretty and they aren't always that exciting, but neither is life in a mining town in the late 1800's and early 1900's. I found this book extremely interesting, realistic and charming. Hennie's time to pass on her stories and guardianship of the town had come and it was both painful and joyful. This is a delightful book in a quiet and thoughtful way. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)
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The author really knows how to describe the characters so that you feel you know them. I would recommend this book to anyone. (