Reviews: A Single Thread (32)
“Enthralling”
(Paperback)
Violet is a women of the 1930s when, as a comic song put it there were, “Two women to every man” after the many male deaths of World War I.
The usual path would be that the spinster daughter cares for the querulous mother - but instead
Violet wants a life.
Still grieving her brother and fiance it takes determination to overcome the demands made by her mother and move to Winchester where she makes a life for herself even if she can't afford the luxury of food.
How she creates an existence and joins the “broidrers” is fascinating. As one interested in cross stitch ( which uses similar stitches to needlepoint done by these ladies) I found the detail fascinating. As usual, the author has so thoroughly researched her subject it is fascinating to read. The section on swastikas was really informative whilst never losing sight of the enthralling story complete with the smells and sights of a really picturesque part of the country. I loved it.
“Stunning and thought provoking”
(Hardback)
I always get really excited when Tracy Chevalier publishes a new book, she is such a masterful storyteller. A Single Thread is her new novel, set in the 1930's in Winchester with the cathedral playing a prominent role. Violet Speedwell lost her brother and fiancé in the Great War and now in her thirties finds her self a 'surplus woman' with little hope of marriage. She moves to Winchester in a bid for independence, takes a new job and joins the broderers who embroider kneelers and cushions for the Cathedral. This opens up a new life, new friends, new experiences, and secrets she must keep from friends and family. Beautifully written, with empathy and understanding this is simply a stunning read.
When I started reading A Single Thread one phrase jumped out to me, 'surplus woman'. This is not a phrase I have heard before, but it was one that described those women, who due to the death of a fiancé, or simply due to the shortage of men in England after the war, were left on the shelf so to speak. With no marriage prospects they were expected to stay at home and look after their parents in their old age, become the spinster aunt and help with nieces or nephews and some gained employment. These women were treated with some suspicion and looked on like lesser citizens, with suspicion and pity. Violet is one of these women, leaving home to get away from her infuriating mother and moving to Winchester to get a job as a typist and live in a rented room. Violet's story is one of struggling to make ends meet, and having to put up with the prejudices against her as a woman living on her own. However, she is strong, intelligent, confident and not frightened of speaking up for herself, all qualities that I greatly admired in her.When she joins the broderers, she makes friends with several like minded women in a similar situation to herself and situations that offer new prospects for her.
Tracy Chevalier always has an element of historical fact in her books. The broderers were a real group of women, led by Louisa Pesel, a character both in fact and fiction, who took on the project of embroidering kneelers and cushions for Winchester Cathedral, that are still in use today. This was a mammoth task to take on, and one the women did in their spare time, between work or running households. Louisa Pesel, like Violet, was one of the 'surplus women' and a talented embroiderer and designer, however she was a lot better off financially than Violet.
This is very much a book about women, their relationships with each other, family, their place in society and the difficulties they faced. It was very much a man's world, where women were judged by their male counterparts and their relationships whether it be husband, brother, father, boss, boyfriend and lover. Women's roles as mother, daughter, aunt, friend and lover are important themes in this book and we able to see how they develop over time, and change with greater understanding.
A Single Thread is a beautiful, poignant story told with great warmth and understanding by Tracy Chevalier. The period of the 1930's opens up many talking points of women's role in society and how that changed after the war due to the lack of men after the huge losses in the trenches. It is a time where change was happening but old fashioned values and parameters were still in place. Violet is certainly a women of her time, and I loved her independence, want for change and strength of character; I felt so many different emotions when reading her story. This is another stunning novel from Tracy Chevalier, full of historical detail, and with unforgettable characters. This is a must for your huge TBR piles, a book to savour, enjoy and delight in as I did.
“A book that’s impossible to put down”
(Hardback)
What a lovely warm story, once I stared reading it I didn’t want to put it down, I actually felt as though I was there living it with all the ladies. It had suspense as well.
“Marvellous Read!”
(Paperback)
Well someone told me a while back that this was just about different kinds of stitches... so it slid down my to be read pile...
Let's be clear I should not have listened to them!
This is a marvellous read which I thoroughly loved, this is about life, living, love, family and finding yourself.
Completely and utterly recommended.
“Gentle but feisty!”
(Paperback)
Gentle but feisty this is the perfect read for right now, it's not too challenging but very enjoyable to read and you learn something about what it was to live in a different time. It also holds a mirror to our own times and the issues that it covers are still very much the issues of today - interesting and worrying that we have come so far and yet not. Highly recommended for fans of Salley Vickers.
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A Single Thread
Fiction, General Fiction
Tracy Chevalier (author)
Hardback Published on: 05/09/2019
Price: £14.99
