Sunday, August 27, 2023

The Seamstress of Sardinia

 

The Seamstress of Sardinia / Bianca Pitzorno
trans. from the Italian by Brigid Maher
NY: HarperPerennial, 2022, c2018.
304 p.

This saga is set in Italy, starting in 1900. It's based on some of the stories that the author's grandmother told her, as well as stories of seamstresses from the past. The author has taken these inspirations and created a very engaging and readable novel, which has extra appeal for those who sew now. 

It's 1900 in Sardinia, and a young girl lives with her only surviving relative, her grandmother. Her grandmother is a seamstress, and to help scrape out a living, the girl learns to sew from a very young age.

This young sartina (seamstress of sheets, linens and basic clothing) relates her life story from her youth to her advanced age. And as she does so, she sheds light on the society she lives in. As a seamstress who goes to people's homes to do their sewing, she is privy to many family secrets. The book is told in episodes that interrelate and create a picture of her town and its many layers of social class and privilege. 

There is a rich and complex cast of characters, all seen through the eyes of this poor girl who has ambitions and respect for herself. There's the Marchesa Esther, an intelligent girl whose upbringing is unusual, and who doesn't put up with the misogyny of her husband and their society; there are the Provera sisters, a family who is rumoured to be so wealthy that they order all their clothing directly from Paris (but when she is called to work for them, our seamstress discovers the secrets of the household, and the wardrobe). There is an American lady who pays well to have her linens managed, and her tragic story is revealed in one whole section of the book. And there is the neighbour child Assuntina, who somehow becomes the responsibility of our narrator. 

Plus there is romance and pathos and tragedy and class strife -- so much drama & excitement, told in a flowing style. The story involves so many details of daily life, from food to social events to transportation to landscape to expectations of women of different classes -- it's illuminating and fascinating. 

The author is clearly a sewist as well, the descriptions of actual sewing are fabulous. The main character is not just a sartina in order to provide inside eyes for the author, rather the sewing is a key part of the many stories she tells. From descriptions of fabrics, to her first sewing machine, it is all very realistic and engaging for anybody who can imagine it right alongside the characters. I love it when my hobbies show up in books like this!

I really enjoyed this book -- for the strong sewing content of course, but also for the story. The characters were so engaging, the stories were dramatic and focused on the female experience. And the setting was completely absorbing. I couldn't stop reading. There was a bit of melodrama near the end that I wasn't completely happy with, but overall this was a great read.

One of my favourite kinds of historical reads are ones that travel alongside a woman over her whole life, and this is a great example. So good! 

2 comments:

  1. This sounds like a very good book and I have put it on my wishlist. I will look for it at an upcoming book sale in September but the odds are against me finding it.

    I had never heard the term "sewist" and it is very interesting. It has been years since I sewed anything, clothing or piecing or quilting, but I am sure I would enjoy reading about it. My grandmother sewed a lot and very well, and my mother did too when I was young.

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    Replies
    1. This was a really enjoyable read, and I'm sure you would recognize some of the sewing content too! I got this at the library, maybe you could too.

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