A single thread

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"A buoyant tale about the path to acceptance and joy--beginning, like all journeys, with one brave step."--People"The best-selling novelist has done a masterful job of depicting the circumstances of a generation of women we seldom think about: the mothers, sisters, wives and fiances of men lost in World War I, whose job it was to remember those lost but not forgotten."--Associated PressA BEST BOOK OF 2019 with The New York Public Library | USA TODAY | Real Simple | Good Housekeeping | Chicago Sun Time | TIME | PopSugar | The New York Post | Parade1932. After the Great War took both her beloved brother and her fiancé, Violet Speedwell has become a "surplus woman," one of a generation doomed to a life of spinsterhood after the war killed so many young men. Yet Violet cannot reconcile herself to a life spent caring for her grieving, embittered mother. After countless meals of boiled eggs and dry toast, she saves enough to move out of her mother's place and into the town of Winchester, home to one of England's grandest cathedrals. There, Violet is drawn into a society of broderers--women who embroider kneelers for the Cathedral, carrying on a centuries-long tradition of bringing comfort to worshippers. Violet finds support and community in the group, fulfillment in the work they create, and even a growing friendship with the vivacious Gilda. But when forces threaten her new independence and another war appears on the horizon, Violet must fight to put down roots in a place where women aren't expected to grow. Told in Chevalier's glorious prose, A Single Thread is a timeless story of friendship, love, and a woman crafting her own life.

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ISBN
9780525558248
9780593149195
9781432870317

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "loss," "needlework," and "embroidery."
These books have the appeal factors richly detailed, leisurely paced, and atmospheric, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subject "postwar life."
These books have the appeal factors bittersweet, moving, and leisurely paced, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "young women," "loss," and "independence."
These books have the appeal factors richly detailed and atmospheric, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "needlework" and "sewing."
These books have the appeal factors leisurely paced and atmospheric, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "loss," "rural life," and "life change events."
Single women in early 20th century England go through voyages of self-discovery and find independence in these historical fiction novels. Thread is set in 1932 and Lodger in 1906. -- Heather Cover
These novels set between the World Wars feature women striving to succeed in their chosen fields. While A Single Thread is atmospheric and bittersweet, and The Last Collection is charged with more politics and emotion, both portray historical figures. -- Katherine Johnson
These books have the appeal factors bittersweet and moving, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "loss," "self-discovery," and "single women."
These books have the appeal factors bittersweet, moving, and richly detailed, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subject "loss."
These books have the appeal factors richly detailed, leisurely paced, and atmospheric, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and characters that are "complex characters."
These books have the appeal factors bittersweet, richly detailed, and sweeping, and they have the genre "historical fiction"; and the subjects "loss," "embroidery," and "self-discovery."
These leisurely paced, richly detailed novels use historical figures as characters in the story. Tudor is about Lady Jane Grey and her sisters, while A Single Thread inserts a fictional character into the real Winchester Cathedral Broderers Group in 1932. -- Heather Cover

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Unveiling portraits of the past laced with vivid historically accurate detail, Tracy Chevalier and Philippa Gregory are both queens of the complexly woven tale of significant events and figures. -- Tara Bannon Williamson
Readers who especially enjoy the spare, elegant quality of Chevalier's writing, subtle characterization, and discreet wit might also enjoy Penelope Fitzgerald, whose novels, whether set in the past or the present, share this same lovely quality. -- Katherine Johnson
A woman's perspective in realistic historical novels is the forte of these authors. Both develop character-driven storylines with a strong sense of place and richly detailed activities. Descriptive prose focuses on the true-to-life, with moving, dramatic, and steamy highlights. Anton can be lusher, Chevalier more lyrical, both fascinating. -- Matthew Ransom
Tracy Chevalier and Geraldine Brooks write intriguing historical novels, sometimes blended with contemporary events, often focused on women. Historical details abound, but these critical events are made personal through skilled character portrayal. Rich background details enhance these compelling, unsentimental, lyrically written novels of other times and places. -- Joyce Saricks
James Scott and Tracy Chevalier create strong female protagonists who must brave both the hostile wilderness and equally hostile townspeople. Their historical fiction is a seamless alchemy between the dramatic and the lyrical. Scott, however, tells far darker tales of madness and fear, while Chevalier offers nobility and personal sacrifice. -- Mike Nilsson
Kate Alcott and Tracy Chevalier feature fictional characters meeting historical figures and acting as eyewitnesses to real events. While Chevalier often profiles artists and Alcott focuses more on events, both authors invite readers to imagine themselves in challenging or romantic domestic and social relationships in their character-centric historical novels. -- Jen Baker
Sarah Dunant's historical fiction, like Tracy Chevalier's, takes the colorful details of a distant time and place and blends them into an intriguing story. Several of Dunant's novels offer vivid, gorgeously written stories set in Europe during the Renaissance, and these will especially appeal to Chevalier's readers. -- Katherine Johnson
Anne O'Brien and Tracy Chevalier have a deft touch with historical fiction, whether set in O'Brien's fifteenth-century English court or Chevalier's seventeenth-century Amsterdam. Both conjure a strong sense of place through rich detail and careful description, holding readers' attention with complex, engaging characters caught in the romance and drama of their times. -- Mike Nilsson
Tracy Chevalier and Susan Vreeland are inspired by artists in history. With keen eyes not only for the character and passions of the artists, but also for the details of their daily lives, these authors present their stories in engaging prose that draws readers into the thoughts and feelings of both secondary and primary characters. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors' works have the subjects "british history," "artists' models," and "husband and wife."
These authors' works have the subjects "british history" and "husband and wife."
These authors' works have the subjects "artists," "european history," and "artists' models."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Violet Speedwell's life is not what she would have wished. The Great War took her fiancé, and now, in 1932, she's a 38-year-old surplus woman. Rather than martyr herself to caring for a toxic mother, Violet moves to Winchester to work. She joins the cathedral broderers, women whose needlework glorifies the church. She finds community and is soon drawn to one of the cathedral bell-ringers. Best-selling Chevalier presents women suffering spinsterhood as embarrassing at best, shameful at worst, to themselves and others. Violet's lack of a husband is her defining feature, conveying the difficulty of building an independent life as a meager salary keeps her threadbare, cold, and constantly hungry. She is pitied and disregarded, and even female friendships, including with a lesbian couple, are problematic. Chevalier's appealing characterization of similarly unwed yet indomitable Louisa Pesel, world traveler and first president of the Embroiderers' Guild of England, provides a marked contrast in contentment and purpose. Chevalier is strongest when describing artistic pursuits, from stitchery to ringing church bells, and that is where the novel both educates and engrosses.--Bethany Latham Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Chevalier (Girl with a Pearl Earring) celebrates the embroiderers of Winchester Cathedral in this appealing story of a 38-year-old spinster who learns needlecraft from real-life embroidery pioneer Louisa Pesel. In 1932, Violet Speedwell is what newspapers of the day call a surplus woman: unmarried and likely to remain so. Working as a typist in Winchester, Violet visits the cathedral, where she admires the intricate canvas embroidery on the kneelers, cushions, and other accessories. She joins the Winchester Cathedral Broderers Group and, after an unpromising start, becomes proficient under the mentorship of group founder Louisa Pesel. A fellow embroiderer introduces Violet to Arthur Knight, a 60-year-old married bell-ringer who, like Violet, has suffered the death of a loved one. Arthur protects Violet from a stalker and takes her to the bell tower to show her the ropes. Violet's confidence grows as she learns to handle a needle, her mother, and her own desires. Chevalier excels at detailing the creative process, humanizing historical figures and capturing everyday life. With its bittersweet romance and gentle pace, Chevalier's latest may be less powerful than her best novels, but it vividly and meticulously shows how vision, teamwork, and persistence raise needlecraft from routine stitching to an inspirational and liberating art. (Sept.)

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Library Journal Review

Violet Speedwell is a 38-year-old surplus woman, a term used to describe women who had lost their husbands or fiancés as a result of the Great War. Having tended to her elderly and unpleasant mother, who never recovered from her own losses, Violet leaves her dull life in Southampton, England, and starts anew in the nearby town of Winchester, where she takes a low-paying job as a typist at an insurance company. In Winchester, Violet stumbles upon a group of women, the broderers, who embroider kneeling pads for parishioners at Winchester Cathedral. Their devout artistry helps shape our heroine's future in more ways than expected. Chevalier (Girl with a Pearl Earring) excels when describing the events and organizations of the time as well as the nuanced craftsmanship of needlepoint. Readers may find themselves more interested in Violet's craft than the story of how her life unfolds. VERDICT For fans of Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows's The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, or readers looking to immerse themselves in the past and enjoy a tale rich in details about an overlooked art. [See Prepub Alert, 2/24/19.]--Cassandra Walsh, South Cty. Lib., Bellport, NY

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Kirkus Book Review

It's been 14 years since the Great War ended, and Violet Speedwell is still grieving the loss of her brother and her fiance. A daring moveliving on her ownwill bring her a chance to breathe and love again.Of course, life as an independent woman in 1932 is hard. A typist for Southern Counties Insurance, Violet barely makes enough money to cover her rent at Mrs. Harvey's boardinghouse. Budgeting for one hot dinner a week and subsisting on margarine and Marmite sandwiches leaves Violet practically starving. She's emotionally starving, too. Chevalier (New Boy, 2017, etc.) masterfully portrays the bleak lives of the "surplus women" left to carry on after a generation of young mentheir potential husbandswere killed in World War I. Telling the tale of the Lost Generation from a woman's perspective, Chevalier fills in the outlines of these forgotten women with unending penny-pinching, mended dresses, and lonely evenings with tea and a Trollope novel. Yet a chance glimpse into a special service at her church opens the door to Violet's healing: She finds the broderers, a group of women embroidering gorgeous, colorful seats and kneelers for the church. Led by the vibrant Louisa Pesel (and her dour assistant, Mrs. Biggins), the broderers' guild offers Violet a chance to make something beautiful and lasting in a world that has been dark and has cut off life at its knees for too long. In Chevalier's novel, the embroidery circle becomes a metaphorical tapestry, threading all these women together. Soon Violet has not only joined the circle, but also made unexpected friends. Violet also discovers her own courage to try for love, a love her society would condemn, but in these days and in this author's hands, all love is sacred.A compelling portrait of women not lost but thriving against the odds. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Violet Speedwell's life is not what she would have wished. The Great War took her fiancé, and now, in 1932, she's a 38-year-old "surplus woman." Rather than martyr herself to caring for a toxic mother, Violet moves to Winchester to work. She joins the cathedral broderers, women whose needlework glorifies the church. She finds community and is soon drawn to one of the cathedral bell-ringers. Best-selling Chevalier presents women "suffering" spinsterhood as embarrassing at best, shameful at worst, to themselves and others. Violet's lack of a husband is her defining feature, conveying the difficulty of building an independent life as a meager salary keeps her threadbare, cold, and constantly hungry. She is pitied and disregarded, and even female friendships, including with a lesbian couple, are problematic. Chevalier's appealing characterization of similarly unwed yet indomitable Louisa Pesel, world traveler and first president of the Embroiderers' Guild of England, provides a marked contrast in contentment and purpose. Chevalier is strongest when describing artistic pursuits, from stitchery to ringing church bells, and that is where the novel both educates and engrosses. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

After her brother and fiancé are killed in the Great War, Violet Speedwell dreads staying home with her grief-wasted mother and moves to Winchester, England, where she finds companionship among the broderers—women who embroider the kneelers for the town's great cathedral, continuing a centuries-old tradition. Alas, the sense of self she discovers is threatened by social forces and a looming second war.

Copyright 2019 Library Journal.

Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
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Library Journal Reviews

Violet Speedwell is a 38-year-old surplus woman, a term used to describe women who had lost their husbands or fiancés as a result of the Great War. Having tended to her elderly and unpleasant mother, who never recovered from her own losses, Violet leaves her dull life in Southampton, England, and starts anew in the nearby town of Winchester, where she takes a low-paying job as a typist at an insurance company. In Winchester, Violet stumbles upon a group of women, the broderers, who embroider kneeling pads for parishioners at Winchester Cathedral. Their devout artistry helps shape our heroine's future in more ways than expected. Chevalier (Girl with a Pearl Earring) excels when describing the events and organizations of the time as well as the nuanced craftsmanship of needlepoint. Readers may find themselves more interested in Violet's craft than the story of how her life unfolds. VERDICT For fans of Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows's The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, or readers looking to immerse themselves in the past and enjoy a tale rich in details about an overlooked art. [See Prepub Alert, 2/24/19.]—Cassandra Walsh, South Cty. Lib., Bellport, NY

Copyright 2019 Library Journal.

Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Chevalier (Girl with a Pearl Earring) celebrates the embroiderers of Winchester Cathedral in this appealing story of a 38-year-old spinster who learns needlecraft from real-life embroidery pioneer Louisa Pesel. In 1932, Violet Speedwell is what newspapers of the day call a surplus woman: unmarried and likely to remain so. Working as a typist in Winchester, Violet visits the cathedral, where she admires the intricate canvas embroidery on the kneelers, cushions, and other accessories. She joins the Winchester Cathedral Broderers Group and, after an unpromising start, becomes proficient under the mentorship of group founder Louisa Pesel. A fellow embroiderer introduces Violet to Arthur Knight, a 60-year-old married bell-ringer who, like Violet, has suffered the death of a loved one. Arthur protects Violet from a stalker and takes her to the bell tower to show her the ropes. Violet's confidence grows as she learns to handle a needle, her mother, and her own desires. Chevalier excels at detailing the creative process, humanizing historical figures and capturing everyday life. With its bittersweet romance and gentle pace, Chevalier's latest may be less powerful than her best novels, but it vividly and meticulously shows how vision, teamwork, and persistence raise needlecraft from routine stitching to an inspirational and liberating art. (Sept.)

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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