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   Book Info

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Stitch in Time (Quilt Trilogy Series #1)  
Author: Ann Rinaldi
ISBN: 0590460560
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
The powerful symbolism of a quilt named Trust supplies a strong send-off for the first of Rinaldi's new trilogy about a Salem shipping merchant family in America's early post-revolution years. Sisters Hannah, Abby and Thankful Chelmsford, driven into separate journeys as a result of their father's cold and manipulative ways, each take a piece of the quilt; the conceit here is that only fabric taken from their most trusted friends will be added to it. Eldest sister Hannah, the narrator, stays in Salem while Abby elopes with a sea captain and fractious Thankful joins their father on a dangerous expedition to western territory. Hannah's feelings, from her doubts about her own prospects to her guilty resentment of Thankful, are fresh and contemporary, effectively contrasting with the story's archaic sex roles and adding to the richness of Rinaldi's ( In My Father's House ; A Break with Charity ) well-researched setting. With her infectious fascination for American history and her sensitive characterizations, Rinaldi again creates an adventurous, heart-catching story that will leave readers in eager anticipation of its successors. Ages 12-up. Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From School Library Journal
Grade 6 Up-This first book in a projected trilogy presents the embittered Chelmsford family of Salem, Massachusetts, circa 1780. From young Cabot, who longs to go to sea; to Abigail, who runs away with her Southern beau; to Thankful, the saucy favored daughter; to Lawrence, the handsome older brother; to Hannah, the eldest and the narrator, readers are drawn into the struggles of a post-Revolutionary war family. Nathaniel, the patriarch, is aloof and puritanical. He leaves for a trip to the Ohio frontier and takes Thankful with him. With two sisters gone, one brother in rebellion, and the other leading the western expedition, Hannah is left as the family sentinel. She takes solace in the quilt she is making from scraps given to her by special friends and family. As she tells her story and stitches her quilt, the patchwork of their lives takes shape. Hannah grows as she learns to cope with startling facts of her deceased mother's life, the return of an old flame, and her own love for a dashing sea captain. There is plenty of personal interest, adventure, humor, fear, and joy in this ambitious novel, and more action than in Rinaldi's In My Father's House (Scholastic, 1993). The appealing characters ring true. However, this is a long book, and Rinaldi occasionally waxes philosophical as Hannah ponders her fate. The research is well documented, and the quilt theme is a unique strand that will eventually pull all three books and sisters together. A good, solid addition where historical fiction is in demand.Beth Tegart, Oneida City Schools, NYCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Gr. 7-10. Rinaldi's latest historical novel, the first of the Quilt Trilogy, takes place in Salem, Massachusetts, from 1788 to 1791. Apart from the prologue and epilogue, the story is narrated by 16-year-old Hannah, who has looked after her family since the death of her mother some years before. "You brood too much for one so young," another character tells Hannah early on, but she has a lot to brood about: her younger brother's planning to run away to sea; her sister Abby's about to elope; their younger sister Thankful blackmails them with the knowledge of the elopement; their ill-tempered father, older brother, and Thankful leave for the wild frontier; Hannah's father's partner seems likely to make unwelcome advances during their absence; and she pledges her love to Richard before he sets sail, only to have her old love, Louis, return from the frontier to ask her to care for his baby, whose Indian mother died. It's a tribute to the author's plotting and characterization that readers can keep it all straight. Dark secrets are alluded to throughout and occasionally revealed, and every so often one of the characters will underscore the analogy between the family quilt Hannah works on and the patchwork of their lives. The author tells more than she shows, though; given the many threads running through the story, it would take more than three volumes to show all. Limiting the plot and characters somewhat might have allowed for more depth. Rinaldi knows how to keep the pages turning by raising readers' curiosity, though whether they'll clamor for the sequels is an open question. Carolyn Phelan


From Kirkus Reviews
Set in late 18th-century Salem, Massachusetts, first of a projected trilogy (to trace three generations) in which a quilt made by three sisters is the central motif. Hannah, the eldest, is the glue that keeps the troubled Chelmsford family from flying apart. Autocratic Father, embittered by a single infidelity by his deceased wife (whom he abused), favors bratty daughter Thankful and rejects illegitimate son Cabot. Hannah and her brother Lawrence conspire in sister Abigail's planned elopement with South Carolina sea captain Nate Videau. Hannah's own earlier romance, squelched by her father, enables her to realize her love for poor but ambitious Richard Lander. Hoping to prevent her from revealing Abby's plans, Hannah encourages their father to take Thankful to the Ohio Territory--where she is captured by Indians and ultimately chooses to remain with them. Meanwhile, each sister works on a piece of the quilt, which Hannah has decided will symbolize trusted people in their lives. Mr. Chelmsford becomes a partner in an early cotton mill; Hannah is drawn into social work on behalf of its exploited workers. Though Rinaldi's research (detailed in a note) occasionally intrudes, it also keeps the setting and flavor authentic. Characteristically for this writer, dialogue is an awkward mix of contemporary and period idiom (Videau's southern accent is particularly inconsistent). Still, the memorable characters and their historically accurate context balance the flaws, raising the story from the soap-opera level. Bibliography. (Fiction. 12+) -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Book Description
"Everyone who has touched their lives...will have a square in the quilt."Hannah is the strong one. The one who cares for her brothers and sisters; the one who's kept the family together. But now, everything is changing. Her father is more distant, and her siblings are starting lives of their own. That's when Hannah decides to make a quilt. A quilt of fabrics from people who are special to the family; people they trust. And when the sisters are separated, Hannah makes sure they each have a piece of the quilt. The quilt she hopes will bring her family together again.



Card catalog description
Shortly after the War of Independence, Hannah sees her family being torn apart by old secrets and new developments, as her sister resolves to marry a sea captain and other siblings prepare to help start a new town in the Northwestern Territory.




Stitch in Time (Quilt Trilogy Series #1)

ANNOTATION

Shortly after the War of Independence, Hannah sees her family being torn apart by old secrets and new developments, as her sister resolves to marry a sea captain and other siblings prepare to help start a new town in the Northwestern Territory.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Hannah is the strong one. The one who cares for her brothers and sisters; the one who's kept the family together. But now, everything is changing. Her father is more distant, and her siblings are starting lives of their own. That's when Hannah decides to make a quilt. A quilt of fabrics from people who are special to the family; people they trust. And when the sisters are separated, Hannah makes sure they each have a piece of the quilt. The quilt she hopes will bring her family together again.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The powerful symbolism of a quilt named Trust supplies a strong send-off for the first of Rinaldi's new trilogy about a Salem shipping merchant family in America's early post-revolution years. Sisters Hannah, Abby and Thankful Chelmsford, driven into separate journeys as a result of their father's cold and manipulative ways, each take a piece of the quilt; the conceit here is that only fabric taken from their most trusted friends will be added to it. Eldest sister Hannah, the narrator, stays in Salem while Abby elopes with a sea captain and fractious Thankful joins their father on a dangerous expedition to western territory. Hannah's feelings, from her doubts about her own prospects to her guilty resentment of Thankful, are fresh and contemporary, effectively contrasting with the story's archaic sex roles and adding to the richness of Rinaldi's ( In My Father's House ; A Break with Charity ) well-researched setting. With her infectious fascination for American history and her sensitive characterizations, Rinaldi again creates an adventurous, heart-catching story that will leave readers in eager anticipation of its successors. Ages 12-up. (Apr.)

Children's Literature - Susie Wilde

Rinaldi writes great books about different times in American history. In A Stitch in Time, Rinaldi writes about the period of time after the War of Independence when Hannah Chelmsford discovers problems in her very respected family. The book is one of the "Quilt Trilogy."

Children's Literature - Kathleen Karr

In this first book of her "Quilt Trilogy," Rinaldi uses the metaphor of a quilt to attempt to hold together the frayed members of the Chelmsford family in post-Revolutionary War Salem. Responsible middle sister Hannah worries about elder sister Abby's elopement, younger sister Thankful's captivity by Indians, her mother's ancient indiscretion and her father's abusiveness in this YA novel with more subplots than a soap opera.

The ALAN Review - Joan F. Kaywell

Using a quilt as the centerpiece for this first book in "The Quilt Trilogy," Rinaldi weaves an intricate and provocative story about the Chelmsford family-twelve-year-old Cabot, thirteen-year-old Thankful, fifteen-year-old Abigail, seventeen-year-old Hannah, nineteen-year-old Lawrence, and their controlling father-set in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1788. Hannah tells this story borne of Rinaldi's "desire to write about a family that gets torn apart, seemingly by events outside the home, but actually due to dark undercurrents from within, undercurrents that reach out from the past, like threads which begin to unravel under the pressure of everyday life and threaten the very fabric of its existence." In the "Author's Note," Rinaldi reveals her research process and the historical facts upon which the story is based. Two more novels will follow in this series, reuniting the family right before the Civil War, "with the pieces of the quilt owned by their descendants." This book is an outstanding beginning to "The Quilt Trilogy."

The ALAN Review - Joyce C. Lackie

Ann Rinaldi's A Stitch in Time, set in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1788, blends richly detailed historical fiction with the timeless theme of the struggle to keep a family together in spite of jealousy, pride, and bigotry. Sixteen-year-old Hannah Chelmsford must learn to confront her domineering father in order to help her brothers and sisters find fulfillment. For herself, Hannah must unlock the secret her father has carried since the war against the British, thereby overcoming her inability to trust those who care for her. Suspense begins immediately with a scheme to help Hannah's sister elope. The novel can be forgiven for being melodramatic at times because it works so well-even the minor characters are intriguing. A lively plot provides plenty of surprises while the patchwork quilt Hannah is trying to finish serves as an eloquent symbol of a family in pieces. Middle school readers of this novel will eagerly await the second in Rinaldi's Quilt Trilogy. Read all 6 "From The Critics" >

     



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