The World at Home
A Novel
-
- $12.99
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
For fans of Christina Baker Kline and Fiona Davis, a coming-of-age story about a young woman discovering love, loss, and the power of her own creativity in World War II San Francisco.
San Francisco in 1944 is a bustling place, a revolving door of soldiers and sailors passing through on their way to the war in the Pacific. Twenty-year-old Irene Cleary, however, is not going anywhere. Although she’d love to travel, the seamstress shop she inherited from her mentor keeps her firmly rooted in the only city she’s ever known. She pours her energy into dressmaking and volunteers for the war effort by dancing with servicemen at the USO.
But Irene’s life is transformed when she designs a gown for Cynthia Burke, the socialite whose new marriage to Max, a handsome Chicago businessman, is the talk of the Nob Hill elite. As Irene is drawn into the Burkes’ glamorous, troubled orbit, and as she becomes absorbed in making costumes for the first American performance of a ballet called The Nutcracker, she finds herself on the threshold of exhilarating, perilous new worlds . . . and the most surprising discoveries of all will be the ones about herself.
Set in a vibrant city during a turbulent time, The World at Home is a coming-of-age story about creativity, loss, and the many lessons we learn from love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Moyer (A Golden Life) delivers an affecting tale of an orphan seeking fulfilment and love in 1944 San Francisco. Irene Mary Cleary, 20, runs the seamstress shop she inherited from Anna Orlova, with whom she apprenticed after leaving the Catholic orphanage where she was raised. After Irene jumps at the chance to alter a dress for wealthy socialite Cynthia Burke, she's charmed by Cynthia's down-to-earth husband, Max, who turns out to be the first man she's attracted to since her last relationship ended in heartache. Irene agrees to hem Max's tuxedo pants, and he eventually asks her to help him with decorating a new nightclub he is opening. Max and Irene bond over feeling like outsiders, especially when he shares how he doesn't belong in Cynthia's well-heeled world, and the pair begin an affair. Irene doesn't think Max will leave Cynthia for her, but she quietly holds out hope that the Burkes will divorce so she can be with him. Moyer expertly weaves in flashbacks to Irene's hardscrabble time in the orphanage, her excitement at USO dances, and poignant details of what happened with Johnny. It adds up to an evocative picture of life during wartime.