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BOOK REVIEW: The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett

Published May 21st, 2026 by Fig Tree
Historical Fiction, Southern Fiction

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ABOUT THE BOOK:

“You give a girl a taste of fresh air and then you take it away―she’ll grow fierce and wild to get it back.”

Oxford, Mississippi, 1933.

Eleven-year-old Meg Lefleur has learned the hard way to rely on no one.

Ever since her beloved mother failed to come home last Christmas Eve, she’s been one of the ‘unadoptable’ girls at the town’s orphanage, where she fights each day to keep her wits sharp and her spirit unbowed.

When she meets Birdie, a young woman who has come to Oxford determined to remind her socialite sister of the impoverished family she left behind, for the first time in a long while it seems someone else might care about Meg’s future.

But as the Depression tightens its grip, Birdie begins to suspect her sister’s charmed life may be founded on a tapestry of lies. Then, Birdie encounters Charlie, a woman haunted by loss who has been pushed to the brink with nothing left to lose.

Drawn together by circumstance, they find unexpected kinship among a disreputable, determined band of women.

But in a town steeped in hypocrisy, even the smallest act of defiance can have dangerous consequences …

Bold, heartwarming, and riotously funny, The Calamity Club is an unforgettable story of resilience and friendship, and a sisterhood of underestimated women who risk everything to take back control of their fates.

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MY REVIEW:

“All this noise inside us and we can’t make a sound.”

Atmospheric, immersive, witty, tender, heartbreaking and unforgettable, The Calamity Club is an absolute masterpiece. Oxford, Mississippi in 1933. Meg LeFleur spends her days shut up in the bleak office at Lafayette County Orphan Asylum for Young Girls but refuses to give in or give up. Birdie Calhoun has come to Oxford to ask her socialite sister for help for their impoverished family. While she waits for her decision, Bride joins her sister volunteering at the orphanage. When she meets Meg the two strike up a surprising bond that will change them both. This is one of those books where it’s best not to know too much about the plot and just enjoy it. So what I will tell you is that what follows is an ambitious story of found family, sisterhood, resilience, survival, sexism, prejudice and underestimated women that will break your heart and then piece it back together. 

Oh, my heart! I had heard great things about Kathryn Stockett’s writing but when I started reading this book I was totally unprepared for the complete emotional devastation she was about to wreak. This book totally destroyed me. Ms. Stockett is an exceptional storyteller who stitches emotion into every word she writes. Funny, wise, smart, joyful, devastating and maddening, the story deals with heavy topics but never feels weighed down by them. At times it is an ethical quagmire that has you torn between what you know is right and the things the women must do to survive. Stockett expertly portrays that moral ambiguity, making it easy to understand their actions and root for them instead of condemning them. A story that will make you laugh, cry, rage and rejoice, it held me by the heartstrings from the first pages and I knew early on that I had found my favourite book this year. 

“This slapped-together band of misfits made me feel, for the first time, that I truly belonged. How the hell, I wondered, did I ever get so lucky?” 

The book is filled with an eclectic but dynamic cast of characters who are richly drawn and memorable. Meg and Birdie are fantastic protagonists who give their chapters a unique voice that makes it easy to move between them. I loved Meg. She’s bright, spirited, perceptive and plucky, but also vulnerable. She longs to fit in and be loved and spends much of her time in the office daydreaming about her mother or how to get revenge on Mrs Garnett, the chairlady of the orphanage. I wanted to reach into the story and hug her so many times and was really hoping for a happy ending for this wonderful little girl. Birdie is fiercely intelligent and outspoken, which sometimes gets her in trouble, but she is also kind, loyal and a little naive. She has a strained relationship with her sister, Frances, who is selfish and frustrating. But the villain of this story is Garnett Pitman. I hated this woman and she seemed to not have any redeeming characters. It broke my heart how she treated Meg in particular and I was hoping she would get her comeuppance. And we can’t talk about the characters of this book without talking about the motley crew of fabulous and rowdy women who are part of the eponymous Calamity Club. I loved these women. They may not have been socially acceptable and a little rough around the edges, but they had so much heart and I loved the family and friendship that they found with each other and with Birdie.

Ambitious, magnificent and thought-provoking, this is an absolute must-read.

Rating: ✮✮✮✮✮

Thank you Fig Tree for sending me a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Kathryn Stockett was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi. After graduating from the University of Alabama with a degree in English and creative writing, she moved to New York City, where she worked in magazine publishing and marketing for sixteen years. Her first novel, The Help, has sold over 15 million copies worldwide. She currently lives in Atlanta with her husband and daughter.

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