Karen D. (augieandlourock) reviewed First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival on + 117 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
my book club read this book.There was a lot of discussion from this book.It makes a good book club read.everyone agreed it was funny.Some even thought it would make a great movie. we all learned about turduckin that they cook in the book.One member wanted to try and cook one.we thought that the old women in the book who is a friend of the priest was funny.we also thought about how many priest feel the way this priest feels in this book and becomes a priest.Everyone hopes he comes out with a second book and that they would defiantly read it.This book could possibly be defensive to some people.The way he makes the priest out to be a drunk and smokes and has a girlfriend.The talk about a gay priest. The Reference to alter girls and one who he thinks is coming on to him.the reference to rednecks.The one he makes about Pentecostal church and their members.He does in a way make fun of the catholic church and what goes on.In a way I did not find it funny and thought it was offensive.Not for everyone.Its defiantly not a christian fiction book.
Patricia H. (beachcomber) reviewed First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival on + 320 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I gave this book a little over 100 pages before I finally gave up. The author just seemed to ramble on and on and wasn't really getting anywhere.
Jennifer R. (cucina1520) reviewed First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival on + 38 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Originally I selected this book as something to read on an upcoming vacation. However, I figured I ought to give it a little "preview" to see if I should bother (books take up space in the suitcase).
I'm a Northerner by birth, as the author is a Southerner by birth. I have a feeling we don't find humor in the same sort of things. It's clear this book is meant to be over-the-top but it still doesn't give me the Southern warmth I've experienced in person. Too many stereotypes pepper the pages in an attempt to be cute and different. Sadly, it is neither.
I'm a Northerner by birth, as the author is a Southerner by birth. I have a feeling we don't find humor in the same sort of things. It's clear this book is meant to be over-the-top but it still doesn't give me the Southern warmth I've experienced in person. Too many stereotypes pepper the pages in an attempt to be cute and different. Sadly, it is neither.
Nancy A. (Chocoholic) reviewed First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival on + 291 more book reviews
Cute story about a priest in small-town Louisiana with a whole mess of troubles coming his way: from his priestly predecessor's beautiful daughter, to the teeny bopper altar girls, to the new Pentecostal family setting up a church down the road and threatening to poach his parishioners. I'm not sure if this would qualify as Christian fiction, but it does involve various forms of Christianity without being preachy. Just a good, ole Southern fiction story!
A good read for a jaded Catholic (or even an un-jaded and open-minded one). I don't know how it would ring for someone unfamiliar with Catholicism.