Sandra Dallas being Sandra Dallas, there are quilts in this book. Some new, some old, some filthy, some pristine. It is the families that use them, the people who make them (one a surprise), who are the focus of this story.
From the point of view of Carrie and Belle, daughters of the focal family, the Martins, we see the grinding hard work, the distressingly hard knocks, and the up-lifting relief of human kindness that are the stuff of homesteading in Colorado in 1910.
The several stories are quite believable, the plot only as convoluted as human life is. This great-grandmother was completely engrossed, but I thought of my 12-year-old self taking in the family tale as well. Sandra Dallas does not write down to anyone, so it is hard for me to know if this book was intended for a YYA audience or for an adult audience. Doesn't matter. Fortunately, Dallas gives us some of the background and source material for Hardscrabble, which only enhance the satisfaction of the story.
Sleeping Bear Press publishes WONDERFUL story books for the youngest among us, as well as lots of important non-fiction (Michigan geology, for instance).
Put this author and this publisher together, and you have a winner every time.>