The seamstress

by Geraldine Wooller

Paper Book, 2007

Description

She sighs as she starts to pleat her skirt. 'Old age ain't no place for sissies, Willa,' I tell her. 'Bette Davis said that.' Willa looks into infinity, across the length of her days. 'What's happening to me?' The question is a complete throwback to clarity, sanity. 'You've got a serious memory problem,' I say, wanting it to sound like Asian flu - not too grave, certainly not irreversible. Though it is. But Willa has already lost interest. - from The Seamstress *** In this fourth novel in the acclaimed New Writing series, Jo narrates the story of her strong, passionate mother, Willa, whose gradual slide into dementia shifts them into a new and difficult relationship. Infused with abundant warmth and wry humor, The Seamstress is a memorable tale of friendship and love between women.… (more)

Collection

Publication

Crawley, W.A.: University of Western Australia Press, c2007.

Pages

227

User reviews

LibraryThing member oldblack
I reckon this is a good book, but not a great book. It finished quite satisfyingly, but the early part of the book was too confusing and too light (? is this what I mean...I'm not sure!). Specifically, many events and issues which were of great significance were barely touched upon and yet we
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seemed to spend time on matters of little apparent significance. (or did I just fail to pick up on things that other more alert readers would have found to be significant?)
It passed the Nancy Pearl test with no great problems, but after reading 100 or so pages I started to wonder whether I should keep going. I'm glad I did, but I won't be looking for more of Ms Wooller's work. Just my personal preference for writing style, I suppose.
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Awards

Dublin Literary Award (Longlist — 2009)
Barbara Jefferis Award (Shortlist — 2008)
Western Australian Premier's Book Awards (Shortlist — Fiction — 2007)

Original publication date

2007

Barcode

509
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