



The World's Fair Quilt
An Elm Creek Quilts Novel
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- €12.99
Publisher Description
A timely celebration of quilting, family, community, and history in this latest novel in the perennially popular Elm Creek Quilts series from New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Chiaverini.
As fall paints the Pennsylvania countryside in flaming colors, Sylvia Bergstrom Compson is contemplating the future of her beloved Elm Creek Quilts. The Elm Creek Quilt Camp remains the most popular quilter’s retreat in the country, but unexpected financial difficulties have beset them and the Bergstrom family’s stately nineteenth-century manor. Now in her eighth decade, Sylvia is determined to maintain her family’s legacy, but she needs new resources—financial and emotional.
Summer Sullivan—a founding Elm Creek Quilter—arrives to discuss an antique quilt that she wants to display at the Waterford Historical Society’s quilt exhibit. When Sylvia and her sister Claudia were teenagers, they had entered a quilt in the Sears National Quilt Contest for the 1933 Century of Progress Exposition, also known as the Chicago World’s Fair. The Bergstrom sisters’ quilt would be perfect for the Historical Society’s exhibit, Summer explains.
Sylvia is reluctant to lend out the quilt, which has been stored in the attic for decades, nearly forgotten. In keeping with the contest’s “Century of Progress” theme, the girls illustrated progress of values—scenes of the Emancipation Proclamation, woman’s suffrage, and labor unions. But although it won ribbons, the quilt also drove a wedge between the sisters.
As Sylvia reluctantly retraces her quilt’s story for Summer, she makes an unexpected discovery—one that restores some of her faith in this unique work of art, and helps shine some light on a way forward for the Elm Creek Quilts community.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Chiaverini (Museum of Lost Quilts) continues the charming adventures of octogenarian quilter Sylvia Bergstrom and her friends at the Elm Creek Quilt Camp retreat in Waterford, Pa. It's 2004, and recurring character Summer, a curator at the Waterford Historical Society, wants to exhibit the quilt that Sylvia and her estranged sister Claudia made when they were teenagers for a quilting contest at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair. In flashbacks, Sylvia recalls painful memories of jealousy and competition with her sister during the making of the quilt. Meanwhile, Sylvia's accountant, Sarah, reveals the retreat's financial shortfalls and suggests opening the adjacent orchard to apple pickers to increase revenue. Sylvia, however, balks at "amateurs running amok in my orchard." The novel's pastoral details, such as the delivery by wagon of homemade apple cider to workers building a farm stand, evoke a simpler time of camaraderie and cooperation between neighbors, and this sense of tight-knit community blends seamlessly with the historical details and enriching quilt lore. Series fans and newcomers alike will be glad to be in Sylvia's company.