From Kirkus Reviews:
The cards--and the corn--are stacked as high as an elephant's eye in this treacly tale of true grit on the Kansas plains in the early 1890s--an unintentionally uproarious amalgam of To Kill a Mockingbird, Friendly Persuasion, and Les Mis‚rables. Pearl Eddy, a plucky Quaker widow (who's also blind), tries to support herself and her four growing sons by farming, sewing, and fending off mortgage foreclosure. It's a relief to report that nobody ties her to the railroad tracks, but Pearl does endure a dizzying profusion of disasters, including the opprobrium of lunkheaded neighbors who violently protest when she takes in, first, a black bare-knuckle fighter named Prophet who's fleeing a lynch mob, then a dispossessed Japanese family whose newly purchased land was reclaimed for unpaid taxes--all the while condemning anybody who resorts to ``violence'' rather than face being beaten senseless. That's not entirely fair: Eidson (St. Agnes' Stand, 1994) does convey the unshaken purity of Pearl's faith effectively, sometimes even movingly. But the novel becomes more unreal, and predictable, as it progresses. Prophet, for instance, keeps leaving the sanctuary of the Eddys' farmhouse (and the little boy who of course idolizes him), only to keep having a change of heart and returning in the nick of time to. . . let's just say that this is the sort of story in which everybody happens on the scene at the Exact Moment when somebody else's fortune, or virtue, or bodily existence is threatened--not excluding a superannuated samurai ``Warlord,'' a pet rooster, and even a reformed rapist and a mollified banker who are there to help turn the tide at the climactic flurry of fire, rattlesnakes, and vigilantism. The inevitable television miniseries is undoubtedly in production at this very moment. (First serial to Reader's Digest Condensed Books) -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From School Library Journal:
YA?A tribute to faith and its power to sustain and redeem. The novel's opening scene takes place on the Kansas prairie in 1891 as Pearl Eddy buries her husband. She is left alone to raise their four sons, ranging in age from 5 to 13, in a small Protestant town where they are the only Quakers. Already suspect because of her religion, Pearl rouses the community's ire by allowing a black fugitive to take refuge in her cellar. As if harboring a Negro is not bad enough, she then takes in a family of indigent Japanese immigrants denied access to the promised land by a legality. Led by a band of ruffians known as the Redmen, the town takes out its collective intolerance and xenophobia on the Eddy household. Pearl's sewing business falls off to nothing, the bank is ready to foreclose on her farm, and she and her children become targets of indignity, even assault. Throughout, she clings to her strong belief in nonviolence and in loving thy neighbor. If the trials Pearl is asked to bear come a little too fast and thick for believability for some, the book remains an uplifting story of courage and of the interdependence of all humanity. Engaging characters, powerful themes, and a plot that piles crisis upon crisis will captivate YAs.?Dori DeSpain, Herndon Fortnightly Library, Fairfax County, VA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.