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The Seamstress by Frances De Pontes Peebles
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The Seamstress (original 2008; edition 2008)

by Frances De Pontes Peebles

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5003248,976 (4.05)77
In 1930's Brazil, a vigilante gang invades the home of two seamstresses, kidnapping one of them.
Member:Tanglewood
Title:The Seamstress
Authors:Frances De Pontes Peebles
Info:Harper (2008), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 656 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:Fiction

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The Seamstress by Frances de Pontes Peebles (2008)

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English (28)  Spanish (2)  Dutch (1)  French (1)  All languages (32)
Showing 1-5 of 28 (next | show all)
I was obsessive about reading this book. I couldn't wait to start it and then I tried stretching it out, but it was so engrossing that I couldn't put it down. It now joins my favorites shelf along with Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Isabel Allende & Carlos Ruiz Zafón. ( )
  KarenDeLucas | Nov 13, 2023 |
La costurera
Frances de Pontes Peebles
Publicado: 2008 | 742 páginas
Novela Aventuras Drama Histórico

Una saga épica sobre la vida de dos hermanas en el Brasil de principios del siglo XX. En el Brasil colonial de la década de 1930, dos hermanas huérfanas conviven con un trasfondo de inestabilidad política y desastres naturales. Emília y Luzia dos Santos, dos hermanas con una excelente destreza para la costura, sueñan con escapar de su pequeño pueblo, un anhelo que separa sus vidas… Luzia sufre una deformidad desde que un accidente en la infancia la dejara lisiada y se convierte en una muchacha ruda y también poco casadera. Su única oportunidad de conseguir la independencia y la felicidad será casarse con el bandido que la secuestra, Antonio el Halcón. En cambio, Emília es delicada como una flor. Quiere una vida acomodada y refinada en la ciudad, por lo que contrae matrimonio con el hijo de un rico médico, a pesar de no estar enamorada de él. Los caminos de las dos hermanas se vuelven a unir cuando la vida de una de ellas corre peligro, aunque ya no son las mismas que en el pasado: Emília se siente sola y desgraciada y Luzia se ha convertido en una forajida a la que apodan la Costurera. Frances de Pontes Peebles nos demuestra con su novela la importancia de los lazos familiares, inquebrantables incluso en la distancia y en la adversidad. Su cuidado estilo, su sensibilidad y su facilidad para contar grandes historias de sagas familiares, le han servido además para que numerosos medios la comparen con Gabriel García Márquez e Isabel Allende. Novela ganadora del premio de la revista Elle Fiction Grand Prix 2008.
  libreriarofer | Jul 20, 2023 |
This book has everything I love: a history lesson, strong characters, and a great story! ( )
  Rdra1962 | Aug 1, 2018 |
I was inspired to read this novel after seeing several other good reviews for it on LT. I really enjoyed the setting of Brazil in the 1920-30s. I also enjoy a good book about sisters. How two people brought up in the same home and by the same parenting figures can be so different is very interesting to me.

Emilia strives to escape the countryside. She is desperate to become a fashionable lady with her own house to run in the city. Luzia Justs wants to be seen for who she really is, more than the girl with the crippled arm. Both these girls are brave in their own way and have their own struggles to face,

I got engrossed in the book very early on, finding it difficult to put down. The middle became a bit harder as the political situation had to be explained within the story. The final quarter of the book was again, very good. ( )
  Roro8 | Jan 14, 2016 |
This book was a surprise to me. It's a large book with a pretty, but generic cover. I knew it was worthy and historical and set somewhere in South America; all of which were fine things, but not things that called me to read it. So the amount of enjoyment I got from this book, the sheer fun I had reading it, was unexpected. I didn't know beforehand that Frances de Pontes Peebles had written a rip-roaring adventure story that ran the gamut from hardscrabble survival in the Brazilian hinterlands to coastal high society to political turmoil to life in an outlaw gang, evading the law and enacting vengeance, all set during the last few years of the 1920s to the first few years of the 1930s.

The Seamstress follows two very different sisters, being raised by their aunt, who teaches them a trade and manners. Emilia longs for a more elegant life, the one depicted in the magazines handed down to her by her employer. She refuses to look at the stolid farmer's sons who would court her, setting her sights on the refined sewing teacher from the capitol. Luiza, tall and with an arm crippled in a fall from a mango tree, has no use for the things Emilia loves. She likes her life in her aunt's house, although she is prickly and rebellious. Circumstances sent one sister to live in luxury in Recife, the provincial capital, while the other joins a band of bandits, led by The Hawk, a feared but canny outlaw. Brazil is changing rapidly, and those changes challenge each woman. Both Luiza and Emilia are complex, interesting and believable characters. They are both strong women, although their strengths fall in different areas.

The book begins slowly, but it wasn't long before I was hauling it around with me to read a few more pages whenever I could. Generally, I only travel with an ereader or a light paperback, but I was willing to lug The Seamstress around with me until, all too quickly, it came to an end. ( )
2 vote RidgewayGirl | Oct 26, 2014 |
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Epigraph
...rising toward a saint

still honored in these parts,

the paper chambers flush and fill with light

that comes and goes, like hearts...

receding, dwindling, solemnly

and steadily forsaking us,

or, in the downdraft from a peak,

suddenly turning dangerous...

- Elizabeth Bishop, "The Armadillo"
Dedication
to the women - living and dead - of my family, all of them ladies and guerreiras

And to James, who always believed
First words
Emíla awoke alone.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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In 1930's Brazil, a vigilante gang invades the home of two seamstresses, kidnapping one of them.

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The lives of two young sisters, Emilia and Luzia dos Santos, seamstresses in early nineteenth-century Brazil, diverge sharply after Luzia is kidnapped by an outlaw band of cangaceiros led by the infamous Hawk, and Emilia marries into a wealthy, politically connected family, and while Luzia becomes notorious for throwing her lot in with her captors, and Emilia learns to navigate high society, they remain loyal to the point of risking their lives for each other.
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