The Silk Weaver

· Pan Macmillan
4.7
3 reviews
Ebook
400
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

*Published in the US as The Hidden Thread*

Inspired by real historical events and characters, Liz Trenow's The Silk Weaver is a captivating, unforgettable story of illicit romance in a time of enlightenment and social upheaval.

1760, Spitalfields. Anna Butterfield’s life is about to change forever, as she moves from her idyllic Suffolk home to be introduced into London society. A chance encounter with a French silk weaver, Henri, draws her in to the volatile world of the city’s burgeoning silk trade. Henri is working on his ‘master piece’, to become a master weaver and freeman; Anna longs to become an artist while struggling against pressure from her uncle’s family to marry a wealthy young lawyer.

As their lives become ever more intertwined, Henri realizes that Anna’s designs could give them both an opportunity for freedom. But his world becomes more dangerous by the day, as riots threaten to tear them apart forever . . .

Ratings and reviews

4.7
3 reviews
Midge Odonnell
May 13, 2018
This was such a beautiful tale with a very modern heroine transplanted to the 18th Century. Despite being brought up in a cloistered setting (rural vicarage) Anna's outlook on the world and her role in it are decidedly not what you would expect from an 18th Century girl - not fer her the hope of husband and family, she wants so much more from life. When she is to move to London to stay with relatives of her father she sees her opportunity to have the life she wants and not what society dictates she should want. At least that is what I came away with from this tale. It is richly evocative of the times and, although fiction, it does give a relatively good facsimile of life in 18th Century London where class structure seems to rule above all else. Transplanted to this bustling city we learn about the machinations of society and the clear delineations between each class (much more complicated than the three classes you would expect - even the "middle class" have a strata of acceptability within it) through Anna's experience and her kicking against it's petty rules and restrictions. This is never more apparent than the schism between the silk weavers that supply her uncle and her uncle's family. They are seen as being almost less than human and yet without their undoubted artistry and talent the merchants would have little to sell. The romance between Anna and Henri is beautifully written and you do become involved in this fictional life. The street scenes - particularly in the market place, are vivid and you can almost smell that uniquely silk scent of the weaving lofts. The perils of the weavers demonstrations and riots are brought to life quite well on the page but it is the harsh and, sometimes arbitrary, justice that is brought to bear on them that really stands out. The sections within Newgate Prison do raise the hairs on your neck. I just felt that it all ended rather abruptly, with a single chapter summing up the rest of Anna's life after Henri completes his Master piece. I didn't expect another couple of hundred pages detailing every nuance of her experience but the end felt rushed and needlessly truncated. The historical timeline has been juggled about a bit for the purposes of the story but the author has gone to the trouble in the afterword of giving both her inspiration for our heroine but also the actual historical facts that buttress the tale which is always a welcome addition to this genre of novel. A good strong read that sucks you in to a time that feels, moralistically, a million years from ours own but is really only a couple of corners back.
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Alexandra Coutts
March 23, 2017
Such a compelling and well written story i accidentally read until 3am! I loved and was sorry to finish The Silk Weaver.
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Michelle Peet
May 1, 2018
Excellent, really enjoyed it.
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About the author

Liz Trenow is the author of several historical novels, including The Last Telegram, The Forgotten Seamstress, The Poppy Factory and The Silk Weaver. Liz's family have been silk weavers for nearly three hundred years, and she grew up in the house next to the mill in Suffolk, England, which still operates today, weaving for top-end fashion houses and royal commissions. This unique history inspired her first two novels, and this, her fourth novel.

Liz is a former journalist who spent fifteen years on regional and national newspapers, and on BBC radio and television news, before turning her hand to fiction. She lives in East Anglia, UK, with her artist husband, and they have two grown-up daughters.

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