A Selection of Barnes & Noble Recommends
On a cold, snowy evening, a young woman lingers in front of a
house pondering a sign that reads, “Prayers for Sale.” Inside,
an elderly widow, Hennie Comfort, watches and wonders before
stepping outside to greet her reluctant visitor. So begins this
engrossing tale of a wise older woman with a lifetime of stories
to tell, and a 17-year-old with prayers that need answers. Set
in 1930s Colorado, it’s a novel in which the drama, humor, and
passions of one very full life are stitched, with love
and understanding, into the fabric of another.
Eighty-six-year-old Hennie has lived in Middle
Swan, a gold-mining town in the Rockies, since
before Colorado was a state. Nit has recently arrived
in town with her husband and her grief, reminding
Hennie of her own youthful hopes and sorrows.
Finding common ground in their Southern
heritage and a love of quilting, an unlikely
friendship blossoms as Hennie captivates Nit with
vivid memories that reach back to the mid-1800s.
“There’s something about stitching together,”
Hennie confides, “that draws a woman out.”
As they sew, Hennie recounts her childhood in Tennessee and
her tragic marriage to her sweetheart Billy, soon to be lost to the
Civil War. She relives the death of their only child and her journey,
by wagon train, across the country to start life anew with a man
she’d never met. She recalls the unexpected blessing she
discovered upon her arrival in Middle Swan and describes the
lively cast of gamblers and moonshiners, quilters and “soiled
doves” she has come to know. Summoning the feelings,
dreams, and satisfactions of Hennie’s years of experience as a
woman, mother, and wife, these stirring yarns serve as a healing
balm for the lonely, anxious Nit -- and help her piece together a
new beginning for her own family.
Just as Hennie’s tales weave a many-hued cloak of mountain
wisdom for the benefit of her young friend, so Sandra
Dallas creates for us -- through a deft blend of historical
detail, authentic voices, quilting lore, and, last but not least,
emotional truths -- a vibrant quilt of heartbreaking incident and
heartwarming compassion.
About the Author
Prayers for Sale is Sandra Dallas’s eighth novel. Her debut, Buster’s
Midnight Café, was a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers
selection; the Los Angeles Times Book Review called it “country music
between covers.” Her subsequent works of fiction include The
Persian Pickle Club, The Diary of Mattie Spenser, Alice’s Tulips, The Chili
Queen, New Mercies, and Tallgrass. Mastering the period detail and ambiance of historical settings from the Civil War
through World War II, Dallas has introduced readers
of her bestselling books to an unforgettable series
of women who know how to harvest friendship --
and happiness -- in the fields of hardship. Fellow
novelist Jane Smiley has rightly called Dallas’s
“a quintessential American voice.”
Born on a farm in Virginia, Dallas grew up immersed
in history, thanks, she says, to her mother. “After
we moved to Denver in 1945, Mom made sure we
saw inside the seedy old Windsor Hotel on Larimer
Street. So I suppose it’s not surprising that the past
is more interesting to me than the present or the
future.” A veteran journalist who spent many years
as the Denver bureau chief for Business Week, Dallas employed her seasoned skills at researching to provide the historical background
and create the authentic characters that give such substance to the
world of Prayers for Sale.
Sandra Dallas currently lives with her husband in Denver. In
addition to her novels, she has written numerous works of nonfiction,
including The Quilt That Walked to Golden, an account of
how mountain women, from the Overland Trail to contemporary
Colorado, have recorded their lives in patchwork heirlooms.
From Our Booksellers
Sandra Dallas takes us back to a time when we knew and cared about the ones
around us, and reminds us of what community really means.
--Patricia Rogala, Birmingham, AL
A delightful story of an unlikely friendship between two women of very
different generations. A perfect read for those who enjoyed The Guernsey
Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.
--Margie Turkett, Annapolis, MD
Like her quilts, Hennie’s story is pieced together with the many and varied
threads of her life story. And all of it is done with love! --Dorothy Newmark, Freehold, NJ
Hennie has sass. She can look at her life and be happy with the choices she
has made, but at 86, she still has the desire to do more than quietly retire. --Sue Gerth, Cedar Rapids, IA
From Reviewers
This satisfying novel will immediately draw readers into Hennie and
Nit’s lives, and the unexpected twists will keep them hooked through
to the bittersweet denouement. --Publishers Weekly
Like the lives narrated, this novel, by the author of Tallgrass, runs the
gamut of heartache, hardship, and happiness. --Booklist
Forgiveness and redemption are the themes of this gentle novel about
hardscrabble lives. --Kirkus Reviews
Despite its flaws…Prayers for Sale is as bighearted as Hennie herself, who hands out stout winter coats to miners' wives, saying they're hand-me-downs when, in fact, they're brand-new, ordered in secret from the Sears catalogue.
The Washington Post
In her charming new novel, Dallas (The Persian Pickle Club; Tallgrass; etc.) offers up the unconventional friendship between Hennie Comfort, a natural storyteller entering the twilight of her life, and Nit Spindle, a naïve young newlywed, forged in the isolated mining town of Middle Swan, Colo., in 1936. When the two meet, Hennie recognizes her younger self in Nit, and she's immediately struck with a desire to nurture and guide Nit, who is lonely and adrift in her new hometown and her brand-new marriage. As Hennie regales Nit with stories and advice, the two become inseparable and pass several seasons huddled around their quilting with the other women of Middle Swan. Even though Hennie maintains an air of c'est la vie as she unravels her life story, Nit and the reader soon realize there are tragedies and secrets hidden behind Hennie's tranquil demeanor. This satisfying novel will immediately draw readers into Hennie and Nit's lives, and the unexpected twists will keep them hooked through to the bittersweet denouement. (Apr.)
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Dallas (Tallgrass, 2007, etc.) offers another of her signature western heartwarmers, complete with knitting circle, this time set in a Colorado gold-mining town. In 1936, Hennie Comfort, who has lived in Middle Swan for 70 years, befriends newcomer Nit Spindle, whose husband has just been hired on a local dredge boat (the work is brutal and dangerous). Octogenarian Hennie feels an immediate kinship with 17-year-old Nit. Both are from Southern border states, both married as teens and both lost a child-Nit is currently mourning the loss of her stillbirth daughter; Hennie's birth daughter drowned as a toddler. They both quilt and Hennie, a founding member of the Ten-Mile Quilters, invites Nit to join the circle. Since Hennie will be leaving Middle Swan soon to live with her adopted daughter in Iowa, she decides to pass on to Nit all of her stories about the various characters who have inhabited Middle Swan. The 1936 plot-the two women's evolving friendship, Nit's new pregnancy, Hennie's romance with an old friend, even her forgiveness of a man who did her wrong long ago-is not much more than a backdrop for the stories Hennie tells about the past. Hennie's own history comes in pieces: Orphaned and then cheated out of her inheritance as a young girl, she married her beloved Billy at 14. After Billy was forced to go off to fight for the Confederacy against his will, a local bully terrorized Hennie and inadvertently caused her baby's death. After the Civil War ended, leaving Hennie a widow, a newly married friend invited her to Colorado for a very long-distance blind date with the man who became Hennie's beloved if imperfect second husband, Jake. While traveling west, Hennie found an abandonedbaby she and Jake raised as their own daughter, Mae. Despite a few surprise coincidences, the book offers little suspense, yet readers will be glad Dallas's likable heroines get their happy endings. Forgiveness and redemption are the themes of this gentle novel about hardscrabble lives. Agent: Danielle Egan-Miller/Browne & Miller Literary Agency
Fans of Lee Smith, Sue Monk Kidd, and Kaye Gibbons will love this book.” Booklist (starred review)
“Dallas is an amazing storyteller with a knack for historical fiction. Her writing is fresh and current even though she writes about the past. Her characters linger in the mind long after the story is finished.” The Denver Post