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A hilarious and moving memoir—in the spirit of Anne Lamott and Nora Ephron—about a woman who returns home to her close-knit Mennonite family after a personal crisis.

Summary edit see section history

Not long after Rhoda Janzen turned forty, her world turned upside down. It was bad enough that her brilliant husband of fifteen years left her for Bob, a guy he met on Gay.com, but that same week a car accident left her with serious injuries. What was a gal to do? Rhoda packed her bags and... read more (warning: may contain spoilers)

Not long after Rhoda Janzen turned forty, her world turned upside down. It was bad enough that her brilliant husband of fifteen years left her for Bob, a guy he met on Gay.com, but that same week a car accident left her with serious injuries. What was a gal to do? Rhoda packed her bags and went home. This wasn’t just any home, though. This was a Mennonite home. While Rhoda had long ventured out on her own spiritual path, the conservative community welcomed her back with open arms and offbeat advice. (Rhoda’s good-natured mother suggested she date her first cousin—he owned a tractor, see.) It is in this safe place that Rhoda can come to terms with her failed marriage; her desire, as a young woman, to leave her sheltered world behind; and the choices that both freed and entrapped her. Written with wry humor and huge personality—and tackling faith, love, family, and aging— Mennonite in a Little Black Dress is an immensely moving memoir of healing, certain to touch anyone who has ever had to look homeward in order to move ahead.

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Quotes edit see section history

  • “I'll have to look up the etymology of 'boner'.”
    Rhoda
  • “Ji jileada, ji vikjeada (the more educated a person is, the more warped).”
  • “In my opinion, sexiness comes down to three things: chemistry, sense of humor, and treatment of waitstaff at restaurants. If the sparks don't fly from the beginning, they never will. If he doesn't get your sense of humor from the first conversation, you'll always secretly be looking for someone who does. And if a guy can't see restaurant servers as real people, with real needs and dreams and crappy jobs, then I don't want to be with him, even if he just won the Pulitzer Prize.”
    Rhoda
  • Popular Highlights from Kindle Customers
  • But I have come to believe that virtue isn’t a condition of character. It’s an elected action. It’s a choice we keep making, over and over, hoping that someday we’ll create a habit so strong it will carry us through our bouts of pettiness and meanness.
    Highlighted by 98 Kindle customers
  • “When you’re young, faith is often a matter of rules. What you should do and shouldn’t do, that kind of thing. But as you get older, you realize that faith is really a matter of relationship—with God, with the people around you, with the members of your community.”
    Highlighted by 88 Kindle customers
  • Is it ever really a waste of time to love someone, truly and deeply, with everything you have?
    Highlighted by 81 Kindle customers
  • What I want to measure, what I can control, is my own response to life’s challenges.
    Highlighted by 64 Kindle customers
  • In my opinion, sexiness comes down to three things: chemistry, sense of humor, and treatment of waitstaff at restaurants.
    Highlighted by 62 Kindle customers
  • I don’t think middle age is about learning to live with ambiguity; it’s just the opposite. It’s about finally developing the resolve to reject ambiguity and embrace simplicity. What could be simpler than saying, ‘No matter how I feel about him, I will not expose myself to his damage’? I’m not saying it isn’t painful. But it is simple.”
    Highlighted by 54 Kindle customers
  • it’s when you don’t love somebody that you do notice the little things. Then you mind them. You mind them terribly.
    Highlighted by 54 Kindle customers
  • Are there not other ways to process abandonment than through the lens of our own victimization and anger?
    Highlighted by 48 Kindle customers
  • Who knows how we can be both good and bad, both hurt and hurtful? The answer is that none of us knows how. None of us knows why. All we can agree on is the fact that the human condition is constituted by wild vacillations between altruism and nefarity, between kindness and cruelty. One moment we’re opening our hearts and our wallets to hurricane victims; the next we’re torturing prisoners of war and laughing about the photographs with our friends.
    Highlighted by 45 Kindle customers
  • adiaphorous morality, what if we agreed just to let people be who they are, since we can’t change them anyway?
    Highlighted by 33 Kindle customers
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Setting & Locations edit see section history

First Sentence edit see section history

The year I turned forty-three was the year I realized I should have never taken my Mennonite genes for granted.

Table of Contents edit see section history

1. The Bridegroom Comes
2. Touch my Tooth
3. Fear of Mosquitoes
4. Wounding Words
5. A Lingering Finish
6. What the Soldier Made
7. The Big Job
8. Rippling Water
9. Wild Thing
10. The Trump Shall Sound
11. And That's Okay!
12. The Raisin Bombshell
13. The Therapeutic Value of Lavender
Appendix: A Mennonite History Primer

Authors & Contributors edit see section history

  1. Rhoda Janzen (Author)

Other Contributors:

  1. Hillary Huber (Reader)

First Edition edit see section history

Original Language: English
Publisher: Henry Holt and Company
Country: USA
Publication Date: 2009
ISBN: 9780805089257
Page Count: 241

Classification edit see section history

  • Library of Congress: PS3610 .A59 Z75 2006
  • Dewey: 811.6

Notes for Parents edit see section history

Reading Level: Adults

Adult themes in this book make it inappropriate for a younger audience and probably not all that interesting to anyone under 18.

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More Books Like This edit see section history

   
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