Household Puzzles
Pansy
Read by TriciaG
Household Puzzles peeks into the life of the Randolph family, four daughters and one son. They are financially strapped but must follow societal expectations . . . and the expectations of Helen, the eldest daughter, who is a slave to the whims of society. Half the family are professing Christians, but only the father really lives it out. Helen's marriage, Tom's job in a saloon, their cousin's visit, and other events all have an impact that reverberate through the family. (Intro by TriciaG) (7 hr 58 min)
Chapters
"Split Things" | 13:50 | Read by TriciaG |
Raisins | 14:16 | Read by TriciaG |
Two Peters | 14:42 | Read by TriciaG |
Theory | 17:01 | Read by TriciaG |
A Sermon | 13:44 | Read by TriciaG |
Smoke and Bewilderment | 18:18 | Read by TriciaG |
"What Is the Difference?" | 16:40 | Read by TriciaG |
Mourning and Dressmaking | 15:02 | Read by TriciaG |
Debts and Doubts | 16:08 | Read by TriciaG |
Light Without Logic | 17:18 | Read by TriciaG |
Mistakes--Great and Small | 16:29 | Read by TriciaG |
Weighty Matters in Small Scales | 17:31 | Read by TriciaG |
Practical Arithmetic | 18:24 | Read by TriciaG |
Sentiment and Dust | 17:39 | Read by TriciaG |
Ways and Means | 18:28 | Read by TriciaG |
Puzzling People | 19:15 | Read by TriciaG |
Opposing Elements | 18:55 | Read by TriciaG |
The Force of Argument | 19:20 | Read by TriciaG |
Real or Imitation? | 16:16 | Read by TriciaG |
A Protector | 19:02 | Read by TriciaG |
A Puzzling Discussion | 18:03 | Read by TriciaG |
Light | 16:52 | Read by TriciaG |
A Discussion Closed | 17:02 | Read by TriciaG |
Theology in the Kitchen | 17:53 | Read by TriciaG |
God's Mystery of Grace | 19:12 | Read by TriciaG |
Laces and Duty | 17:24 | Read by TriciaG |
Storm and "Moonshine" | 16:06 | Read by TriciaG |
A New Start | 17:48 | Read by TriciaG |
Reviews
a Pansy triumph
okra
I didn't think that Pansy had it in her to write as disagreeable a character as Helen Randolph. Oh my goodness, The number of times I got worked up over how utterly self-absorbed and self-righteous that girl could be with her family. I wanted to shake her and throw her out of the house. Good literature creates strong feelings.
Sustainable Fashion?
Phxjennifer
There's an interesting discussion about the contrasting claims on a Christian's money between charity and 'fitting in'. (They called it propriety.) In an era when upper-middle class ladies were expected to wear silk dresses made of 12 yards of fabric and furlongs of trimming, all sewn by hand, one day dress could easily cost more than $500, and evening dresses could top $1000. (In 1870s money!) The rest of the book is very much in Pansy's usual vein: temperance, bad romantic decisions, illnesses, deaths, Christians reaching out to help (or not,) people refusing or accepting help, young people pairing up, etc. I enjoyed it.
A little slow at the start
Wendy Mathieu
I enjoyed this book but found it a bit hard to get into for the first couple of chapters. I enjoy everything read by Tricia G.
Entertaining & Inspiring
Scarlet576
Beginning of a series of sweet stories of the salvation of the Rudolph household. Interesting characters and pleasant reading voice. Well done.
Household Puzzles
E.W.
Quite good. Be sure to listen to The Randolps for the rest of the story.
Emjoyed
Mary
The puzzles of living life for God surrounded by those without thought of Him
Lovely story
J.S.
Make sure you listen to The Randolphs after this as it's the sequel.
A LibriVox Listener
for the next part, listen to "The Randolphs" also read by TriciaG