The Tailor's Daughter: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Janice Graham Publisher: St. Martin's Press Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $0.74 You Save: $24.21 (97%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 605481
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 400 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.8 x 1.5
ISBN: 0312349130 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780312349134 ASIN: 0312349130
Publication Date: October 17, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Hardbound w DJ Name inside Buy from a trusted librarian! Not ex-library LIBRARY_MOM LOVES BOOKS AND SHIPS EVERY DAY THAT THE POST OFFICE IS OPEN
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Product Description
Set in 1860’s Victorian England, Janice Graham’s suspenseful new novel tells the story of Veda Grenfell, a passionate young woman with an indomitable spirit. Raised on Savile Row, the enclave of fashionable London tailors, Veda is every inch her father’s daughter. She has inherited his talent, his sense of style, and his love of tailoring. When a fever leaves her deaf at the age of sixteen, shattering her hopes of marriage, only Grenfell’s familiar workshop offers any promise of an active life. Determined to prove her worth in a world off-limits to respectable women, Veda eventually persuades her father to promote her to the front of the shop where she . She makes a name for herself as tailor to London’s smart young sporting set.
Veda matures into a woman of eye-catching beauty, inspiring the devotion of her dear and faithful tutor, Mr. Nicholls, as well as an ambitious Italian whose marriage proposal she rejects, with disastrous consequences for her father’s firm. For years, Veda has been increasingly drawn to Harry Breadalbane, a young viscount with humane ambitions frustrated by the expectations of his class. Heedless of the unsettling rumors about Harry’s family and his brutally powerful father, Veda has absolute faith in Harry’s goodness. When passion turns to betrayal, she abandons her beloved Savile Row and sets off on a treacherous journey that will lead her into a world of deception, murder, and madness.
In the classic tradition of richly detailed historical fiction, Graham’s elegant prose paints a deeply human portrait of a girl both willful and confused, vulnerable and yet fiercely courageous. Veda’s chronicle of her struggle to sustain ties with the hearing world, and her determination to seize for herself those dreams others try to deny her, render her character unforgettable and illuminate a world rarely imagined in literature.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Gem of a book. September 10, 2008 Highly enjoyable! It's been a long time since I read a book as memorable for its writing as the story itself. Wonderful descriptive elements, but does not distract from the easy readability. I had a hard time putting this one down.
HORRIBLE. August 10, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is the worst pick I've made in over a year. Long, drawn out, and tedious character/plot development-there was much more attention given to the details of the clothing than to the excitement of the story. I finally thought it was about to get good at page 300 or so, and from page 300 till page 360? It was great!! But after that, it bored right down to the same old tedious drivel.
If I'd wantd a Harlequin romance, I would have purchased one for a lot less money than this book cost. Save your money- if you like historical fiction, try Phillippa Gregory or Anya Seton or Karleen Koen. Hell, even Robert Patterson is better than this! Just do yourself a favor and don't waste your money here.
Beautiful Victorian novel with a memorable heroine... April 23, 2008 Victorian England (1850s-1860s). The Grenfell family has moved up in financial security. Their tailoring shop has been very successful, and their move to a chic London address is only the beginning of things to come. Even though they have done well financially, they still have to move up in society, something that proves difficult, for most of the gentry refuse to mix and mingle with tradesmen. The young Veda Grenfell might be affected by this. After all, her parents want her to marry someone of rank and recognition. But then tragedy befalls the family. Veda's brother, whose passions for poetry override his father's desire to take over the family business, dies in an accident; then her mother dies when giving birth, and so does the child. As if that weren't bad enough, Veda suddenly takes ill and, soon after being diagnosed with Typhoid, becomes deaf. Some time later, her very good friend, Alice Breadalbane, the Countess of Hambledon, also dies. Veda holds some affection for her countess's son, Lord Hambledon, but his diversion to marriage, not to mention his unapproachable rank, encourages her to seek her affections elsewhere. In spite of living without sound and all of the tragedies she has endured, Veda is a young woman of spirit and determination, and when she begins to take lip-reading lessons with the sweet Mr. Nicholls and pursues her passion for dressing and creating men's clothes (in spite of its lack of propriety), not to mention the attention of potential suitors such as Mr. Balducci, Veda feels alive again. But more things, dark and unexpected things, are in store for this courageous heroine.
What I like most about The Tailor's Daughter is how beautifully written it is. It has a Victorian charm to it that drew me in, reminding me of favorite classics like Jane Eyre and North & South. The novel itself is a little hard to get into at first, for Graham begins her tale by telling the reader about Veda and her family, but once the author gets down to the business at hand the novel is almost impossible to put down. Veda is a wonderful heroine -- someone who never backs down, even when she is faced with some horrible and unexpected twists. Her lack of propriety has a naive quality to it that endeared her to me. The parts in which people, one in particular, take advantage of her because of her disability are heartbreaking and frustrating, but you could count on Veda in that she won't cower away from adversity. The Tailor's Daughter is a treasure. Victorian is my favorite era (all sixty-four years of it), and Janice Graham brings this particular era to life. The small pictures of women in hoop skirts and bonnets in some of the pages are an eyeful as well. Are you in the bargain for an intriguing historical novel? I cannot recommend this gem enough.
Bittersweet, Moving, Lovely February 12, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I really enjoyed Janice Graham's story about the life of Veda Grenfell, a bright and headstrong young woman making her way in a man's world.
Veda lives with her mother, her father and her brother Reggie in Victorian London. Her father is a tailor and Veda too loves making beautiful clothing for people.
Veda suffers many loses in her youth including the loss of her hearing at the age of sixteen. Veda gives up any hope of living a typical life in London's society. And instead pursues her love of tailoring and works in her father's business.
Despite her deafness she has two suitors who would have her hand in marriage. And she has her own ideas and feelings about Harry Breadalbane, a popular viscount who is far above Veda's place in society. I thought Graham did an excellent job illustrating the difficult situations Veda had to deal with because of her deafness. In particular Veda describes her need for candle light and fire light so she is able to see a person's lips in order to lip read what they are saying. She says that candles are expensive but that her father would never deny her the candles.
I thought this was a moving love story with plenty of grief and despair. I thought the writing was very good and the story well told. I really liked the characters Veda Grenfell and Harry Breadalbane. I thought Janice Graham created very life like characters and realistic relationships. I thought this was a lovely story about a clever and headstrong young woman who is willing to set aside traditional rules in order to pursue her happiness in life.
How much tragedy can a heroine take! January 5, 2008 I bought this book based on the reviews here at Amazon. It was a good read but somewhat difficult to believe with all the tragedies that the poor heroine suffers. Her Mom and brother die, she becomes deaf, she is nearly assaulted by her fathers employee, loves someone above her station and marrries him and then gets it annulled, has a child who is then stolen from her, etc! In the end I was depressed that nothing could go right for this poor girl. The last quarter of the novel suddenly morphs into a gothic tale with a tragic fire scene that sets us up for a HEA ending. I agree with the other reviewers that the ending was a little off and did not mesh well with the rest of the story.However by that time I was just desperate for the heroine to get a lucky break! Overall a good read, but the endless stream of tragedies was a little manipulative.
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