A perfect debut novel is like a perfect dress—it’s a “must have”
and when you “try it on” it fits perfectly.
and when you “try it on” it fits perfectly.
THE DRESS IN THE WINDOW
Sofia Grant
Releasing July 25, 2017
William Morrow
A perfect debut novel is like a
perfect dress—it’s a “must have” and when you “try it on” it fits perfectly. In
this richly patterned story of sisterhood, ambition, and reinvention Sofia
Grant has created a story just right for fans of Vintage and The
Dress Shop of Dreams.
World War II has
ended and American women are shedding their old clothes for the gorgeous new
styles. Voluminous layers of taffeta and tulle, wasp waists, and beautiful
color—all so welcome after years of sensible styles and strict rationing.
Jeanne
Brink and her sister Peggy both had to weather every tragedy the war had to
offer—Peggy now a widowed mother, Jeanne without the fiancé she’d counted on,
both living with Peggy’s mother-in-law in a grim mill town. But despite
their grey pasts they long for a bright future—Jeanne by creating stunning
dresses for her clients with the help of her sister Peggy’s brilliant sketches.
Together,
they combine forces to create amazing fashions and a more prosperous life than
they’d ever dreamed of before the war. But sisterly love can sometimes turn
into sibling jealousy. Always playing second fiddle to her sister, Peggy yearns
to make her own mark. But as they soon discover, the future is never without
its surprises, ones that have the potential to make—or break—their dreams.
Excerpt
#1: Jeanne
Nancy
Cosgrove had seen the gown made up in taffeta in Vogue,
and taffeta was what she had to have. Jeanne made a muslin first, at
Nancy’s insistence, even though muslin could never stand in for the
stiff, slippery hand of the real thing. The muslin’s skirt hung
around Nancy’s lumpy hips like wet rags and Jeanne thought she’d
finally come to her senses—but Nancy just went home to get her
crinoline. It made only a slight improvement: the muslin spread out
over the stiff underskirt like leaves floating on a pond. But Nancy
took herself across the river to the city, where she found a bolt of
emerald green moiré taffeta in a shop at the corner of Fourth and
Fulton.
When
she brought it back, the bolt of fabric sitting in the passenger seat
of her garish two-tone Packard Clipper like a visiting dignitary, it
occurred to Jeanne that Nancy might still be trying to one-up her,
even after everything that had happened. Never mind that Jeanne slept
in the unfinished attic of the narrow row house that she shared with
her sister and her niece and Thelma Holliman. She suspected that
there was a part of Nancy that was stuck back at Mother of Mercy High
School, where Jeanne had sailed like a swan through adolescence,
winning top marks and courted by a steady stream of St. Xavier boys.
By contrast, poor Nancy had been as awkward as a stump, beloved by no
teacher, no suitors, and none of the other girls.
Jeanne
tried not to hold this belated vengefulness against Nancy: they badly
needed her money. Still, Nancy had no head for sums, and there was
not enough fabric on the bolt for the New Look dress she had hired
Jeanne to sew for her. Unlike the wide bolt of unbleached muslin that
Jeanne kept on a length of baling wire on Thelma’s back porch, the
taffeta that Nancy brought back was only forty-eight inches wide—a
scant forty-eight inches at that, the selvages taking up the better
part of an inch on either side. Jeanne could barely cut a skirt panel
from it—even with Nancy’s oddly short, bowed calves—and only by
forgoing the deep hem she’d planned in favor of an under stitched facing.
Jeanne
had been up the night before until nearly three in the morning,
hand-tacking that facing with a single strand of superfine Zimmerman
and a straw needle. When she finally went to bed, she had an
unsettling dream. It had been months since she’d dreamed of
Charles, but suddenly there he was, wearing a hat that had hung on a
nail in the carriage house of his parents’ estate in Connecticut, a
western style of hat that his father had brought back from a trip to
Montana.
But
in the dream Charles frowned at her from beneath its broad brim,
while he pressed his hands to his stomach, trying to stanch the blood
pouring from the hole in his side, while all around him in the
trenches of Cisterna, his fellow Rangers were felled by the German
panzers. Only six of them came home, out of more than seven
hundred—but
Jeanne
didn’t care about any of them. She would have traded them all to
have Charles back.
War
had made a monster of her, and there was nothing she could do about
it—except to sew. A stitch, another, another. In this way the
minutes and hours passed.
Sofia
Grant has the heart of a homemaker, the curiosity of a
cat, and the keen eye of a scout. She works from an urban aerie in Oakland,
California.















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