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I Wish I Had a Red Dress | 
| Author: Pearl Cleage Publisher: William Morrow Category: Book
List Price: $24.00 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $23.99 (100%)
New (12) Used (87) Collectible (4) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 86 reviews Sales Rank: 1004598
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0380977338 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780380977338 ASIN: 0380977338
Publication Date: July 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.
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Product Description
Joyce Mitchell was widowed far too young when her beloved husband, Mitch, died in a tragic accident five years ago. Since then she's kept her hands full and her mind and heart occupied by running The Sewing Circus, an all-girl group she founded to provide badly needed services like day care and job counseling to young women, many of whom are single mothers. More important, The Circus is a place for lively, wide-ranging, heart-to-heart discussions that will help members grow into what Joyce likes to call "twenty-first-century free women." All in all, Joyce has a full and rich life. She has her work, her family, her friends, and her town. But there are some nights when she crawls into bed alone and has to admit that something is missing. What she doesn't have is that red dress she keeps dreaming about or a social life that would accommodate it even if she braved the mail and bought one. To further complicate matters, she may not have The Sewing Circus much longer, as the state legislature has decided not to fund the group's vital but hard-todefine work with young women who are too often regarded as problems rather than possibilities. Feeling defeated and pessimistic, Joyce reluctantly agrees to keep a date for dinner at the home of her best friend, Sister -- a reverend like no other-and finds not only a perfect meal but a tall, dark stranger named Nate Anderson. Nate has just joined the administration at the high school and his unexpected presence in Idlewild touches a chord in Joyce that she thought her heart had forgotten how to play. Nate feels the same immediate connection, but both have enough experience with broken hearts to take it real slow. Besides, they've got too much work to do to concentrate on falling in love.... But life moves at its own pace, and as Sister says, "if you want to make God laugh, make plans." Particularly when it comes to matters of the heart. Joyce decides the trick is to stay focused and to remember that nothing is as sexy as the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, especially if you tell it while you're wearing a perfect red dress....
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| Customer Reviews: Read 81 more reviews...
Not her best work clearly. July 30, 2008 Very disappointed in this work by such a talented author. This was one of my book club selections and it was unanimous---not a good pick :-(
Classic Cleage imagery.... February 19, 2008 "I Wish I Had a Red Dress" was written in the style of many of Cleage's other titles--a lead heroine who is so busy working tirelessly for the greater good, she hasn't made time to surrender to love. This piece's lead, Joyce, however has been mourning her husband Mitch for what seems like far too long. With the entrance of Nate Anderson, a strong, handsome, high school vice principal with a highly developed consciousness of women, she is enticed to give love a chance again.
However, this is Pearl Cleage, and the plot is not just as simple as that. Cleage deftly intertwines this romance with issues like the state of gender relationships and equality in the African-American community today and the politics involved....as always. The characters' commentaries on the modern-day black film industry is in itself enough for a great book club discussion and a call to action if inspired.
I love how Cleage always manages to convey such strong messages of "womyn power" without ever undercutting or devaluing the role of and need for the strong and responsible black man in the black community. It's a skillful talent that only a talented storyteller like Pearl Cleage do successfully.
Pretty Good Book May 1, 2007 I really enjoyed this book, I read it in one sitting. I believe it to be even better than What Seems Ordinary. Enjoyable, witty and very entertaining.
I Wish I Had A Red Dress January 9, 2007 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
If this book was written by a caucasian it would be considered racist and separatist. I have an African American grandson and I hope he never reads books that encourage one race to view another with disgust. In the book the author refers to blacks who are going to see a movie for the sole reason it has a black director. I don't understand this line of thinking. If you had a book that referred to having an all white movie weekend-only white actresses, only white directors, I think the author would be called to task. To say for example that Richard Gere is a perfect actor because he would never kiss a black woman. Yet it is ok if it is Denzel Washoington never kissing a white woman. A true example of a double standard here. I think this author can not get beyond her own racism to write the story. The story might have been good-Pamela Mutch Stevens
Nice Red Dress January 6, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This was a most enjoyable novel, I found it very interesting without drifting in to a great deal of self hate that quite a few authors indulge thier readers with. Pearl Cleage has a very useful and positive story to tell, she tells it well and it is very entertaining. She has again picked a subject area that is well away from mainstream and she makes it relevant to more than just a few folks. This is the second of her novels that I have read and I can say that she is one of my favorite authors.
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