The Bookbinder
Pip Williams. Ballantine, $28 (448p) ISBN 978-0-593-60044-3
Williams returns (after The Dictionary of Lost Words) with a moving coming-of-age historical set in England during WWI. Peggy Jones, 21, works in the bindery at Oxford University Press, where she reads tantalizing snatches of Shakespeare and Homer while folding, gathering, and sewing together the pages. When war refugees arrive in Oxford from Belgium, Peggy befriends Lotte, a former librarian from Louvain, who joins her at the bindery. While reading and writing letters for wounded soldiers being cared for on the campus, Peggy gets to know a handsome Belgian named Bastiaan, and they fall in love. Meanwhile, an entitled student and a sympathetic college librarian encourage Peggy to prepare for and take the rigorous Somerville College admission exam, and her supervisor helps her see that her twin sister, Maude, who has a developmental disability, will thrive if afforded more independence, which in turn frees Peggy to pursue a more fulfilling life for herself. Authentic period details and intriguing glimpses into the bookbinding process add to Williams’s portrayal of resilient women. This would make a riveting costume drama for the large or small screen. Agent: Linda Kaplan, DeFiore & Co. (Aug.)
Details
Reviewed on: 06/09/2023
Genre: Fiction
Other - 978-1-922806-62-8
Paperback - 464 pages - 978-0-593-60046-7
Paperback - 680 pages - 979-8-88579-378-0