NEW YORK TIMES EDITOR''S CHOICE * NAMED ONE OF THE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS OF 2026 BY THE NEW YORK TIMES * OPRAH DAILY * GOODREADS * GARDEN & GUN * SOUTHERN LIVING * WOMAN''S WORLD * TOWN & COUNTRY * AARP * MINNESOTA STAR-TRIBUNE * COUNTRY LIVING * NEW YORK POST "So immersive, exciting, and downright fabulous, you never want it to end." --Oprah Daily "A heart-wrenching, often hilarious story of economic hardship, moral posturing, and the particular yearnings of childless women and motherless girls." --The New York Times "Terrific." --Adriana Trigiani, Good Housekeeping "Action is carried relentlessly forward on the surf of Stockett''s full-hearted, down-to-earth prose, her dialogue and inner monologues so well crafted that each sentence gives the impression of being not crafted at all, but inevitable." --The New York Times Book Review "A labyrinthine story of savvy and gall with an irresistible pull." --Christian Science Monitor "All three protagonists are compelling, but Meg is the star of The Calamity Club. She owes a debt to other smart, lonely girls of Southern literature--especially Frankie, from Carson McCullers'' "The Member of the Wedding"--but her voice is singular and laugh-out-loud funny. Stockett deftly unites her three main characters for an ending that''s as cozy and satisfying as the chicken pot pies her characters keep making and eating.
" --Minnesota Star Tribune "Filled with lots of humor and hope." --Atlanta Journal-Constitution "A rip-roaring adventure of found family, complex sisterhood, tested moral compasses and capable women making the best (hey, even a fast buck) out of truly awful circumstances . Meg, I trust, will become multiple readers'' favourite down-but-not-out child narrator since Demon Copperhead . Stockett is a born storyteller." --The Sunday Times (UK) "The power of The Calamity Club lies in the beauty of the narration, the touching story, the display of the historic mistreatment of women, and the fact that these women hold the power--even if it''s just for a while. It should make you angry at what was done to women who didn''t conform and perhaps what is being done to women now." --Book Reporter "An engrossing, page-turning read that flies by. I predict that you will not want to put it down once you enter the world of The Calamity Club .
" --Jackson Clarion Ledger "As witty, bold, and transportive as it is heartbreaking and compassionate, The Calamity Club is storytelling at its finest. Stockett''s masterfully drawn characters are simply unforgettable. Bravo to Meg, Birdie, and Charlie for reminding us to never underestimate the bottomless resilience of smart, spirited women in revolt against circumstance and injustice." --Shelley Read, internationally bestselling author of Go as a River "A big-hearted tale packed with plenty of details about life in the South during the lead-up to the Great Depression." --Country Living "A triumph of a novel, a quick-witted story about hard times and suffering. It is tightly, cleverly plotted, and Stockett''s characters are effortlessly sketched." --The Oxford Eagle "Smart, funny, and driven by unforgettable characters whose opinions and actions leap off the page, this is a must-read." --Bonnie Garmus, author of Lessons in Chemistry "Compulsively readable .
A satisfyingly twisty tale . Fans of Stockett''s bestselling debut will love this engaging follow-up." --Kirkus "Stockett balances humor and heartbreak with an ease that makes the pages fly. One moment you''re laughing at a perfectly observed social disaster, the next you re sitting with a character in a moment of raw vulnerability. If you''re looking for a character-driven novel with southern charm, biting social observation, and a cast of women you''ll fall in love with, The Calamity Club absolutely delivers." --Tim Ehrenberg, "Tim Talks Books" "Stockett''s vibrant follow-up to her bestselling 2009 novel, The Help , traces the intersecting lives of an exasperated older sister, a precocious orphan, and an enterprising woman in 1933 Mississippi. By turns hilarious and heartbreaking, this offers a memorable view into the impossible choices faced by women in the Great Depression." --Publishers Weekly "The enormous success of The Help as a novel and as the source for the Academy Award-winning film has left readers longing for Stockett''s second novel.
As she did in The Help , Stockett again satirizes the hypocrisy underpinning much of the early-twentieth-century South in a saga populated with memorable characters who rely on stock-in-trade pluck and sass to right all wrongs." --Booklist Praise for The Help: "The two principal maid characters . leap off the page in all their warm, three dimensional glory. [A] winning novel." --The New York Times "This could be one of the most important pieces of fiction since To Kill a Mockingbird. If you read only one book . let this be it." --NPR.
org "Wise, poignant . You''ll catch yourself cheering out loud." --People "Graceful and real, a compulsively readable story." --Entertainment Weekly "A beautiful portrait of a fragmenting world." --The Atlanta Journal-Constitution "The must-read choice of every book club in the country." --The Huffington Post "At turns hilarious and heart-warming." --Associated Press "In a page-turner that brings new resonance to the moral issues involved, Stockett spins a story of a social awakening as seen from both sides of the American racial divide." --The Washington Post.