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The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Down

Audiobook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

In Book One, a wildly diverse group of women weathered storms together that brought them unusually close. These beautiful new relationships are now stretched to the limit in The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Down. Jodi Baxter is recovering physically and spiritually from her car accident that killed a young boy; MaDear comes to believe that Jodi's husband helped lynch her older brother over 70 years ago in the Deep South; and during a Yada Yada prayer meeting, a heroin-crazed woman robs the group at knifepoint. As these events unfold, the Yada Yada Prayer Group draws close together, trying new worship styles at each other's churches, dealing with estranged families, and walking out into deeper waters of faith. After the group's first-year anniversary, they truly begin to live the meaning of their name and discover that getting down on their knees is the most freeing place of all.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 9, 2004
      Jackson examines the many facets of forgiveness, grace, racial prejudice and healing in this enjoyable follow-up to The Yada Yada Prayer Group
      , which has 75,000 copies in print. The adventures of the praying, ethnically diverse group of Chicago Christians, "that drawer full of crazy-colored, mismatched socks," are about to accelerate. Jodi Baxter's physical scars from her car accident continue to heal, but her emotional turmoil returns in the form of nightmares. She's further challenged when her friend Adele Skuggs's elderly and failing mother mistakenly believes Jodi's husband, Denny, is a man from the past who lynched her brother. Adele finds her prejudices against all white people simmering and takes a hiatus from the prayer group. Further disaster strikes when the women are robbed at knifepoint by a crazed drug addict. Only forgiveness and prayer will heal the women's guilt and fear. The talented Jackson peoples her novels with delightful characters, and there's enough detail about the meals to make even a picky eater's mouth water. The scenes detailing different church services can be too lengthy, and a plot contrivance involving a boy's surprising identity strains credibility. Laced with humor, fine description, and interesting and realistically flawed characters, however, this well-paced story is certain to keep fans turning the pages.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The culturally diverse women who met at a Christian women's conference in Chicago in THE YADA YADA PRAYER GROUP continue to grow their faith and friendship. Jodi is still recovering from the accident that ended the first book. A robbery during a Yada Yada meeting and Adele's withdrawal from the group add more opportunity for grace to do its thing. The talented Barbara Rosenblat brings the book to life with flair and palpable enthusiasm for the characters. Each unique voice reinforces the ethnic diversity of the group. Jodi's narration clarifies references to events in the first book, so even if you're new to the Yada Yadas, you won't feel lost. N.E.M. 2005 Audie Award Finalist (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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