The bookbinder A novel

Pip Williams, 1969-

Book - 2023

"It is 1914, and as the war draws the young men of Britain away to fight, women must keep the nation running. Two of those women are Peggy and Maude, twin sisters who live on a narrowboat in Oxford and work in the bindery at the university press. Ambitious, intelligent Peggy has been told for most of her life that her job is to bind the books, not read them-but as she folds and gathers pages, her mind wanders to the opposite side of Walton Street, where the female students of Oxford's Somerville College have a whole library at their fingertips. Maude, meanwhile, wants nothing more than what she has: to spend her days folding the pages of books in the company of the other bindery girls. She is extraordinary but vulnerable, and Pegg...y feels compelled to watch over her. Then refugees arrive from the war-torn cities of Belgium, sending ripples through the Oxford community and the sisters' lives. Peggy begins to see the possibility of another future where she can educate herself and use her intellect, not just her hands. But as war and illness reshape her world, her love for a Belgian soldier-and the responsibility that comes with it-threaten to hold her back."--

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Pip Williams, 1969- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages ; cm
ISBN
9780593600443
9781922806628
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Peggy Jones is a bindery girl in Oxford during WWI, one of the unsung literary heroines who folds, gathers, and sews books. Although she never tires of the "clean leather and the fading scent of ink and glue," she must always remind herself as she sneaks glimpses at the manuscripts that her job is to bind books, not read them. One day, when looking at The Oxford Book of English Verse, Peggy notices that all the names are men's, which leads her to wonder about the world's most famous author: Anonymous. "If they had names," she considers, "might they be Anna or Mary or Peg?" When Peggy volunteers to help the soldiers who have returned from the war by talking and reading to them, she is finally able to indulge her love of stories, and soon, when she falls in love with a Belgian soldier, she finds herself in a story of her own. Set far from the front, The Bookbinder tells of the wars, including those of class and women's rights, that go on at home. Williams' lovely novel was inspired by the Oxford University Press archives, where she came across the names of the actual bindery girls who worked on its in-house publication, The Clarendonian. She reproduces their signatures at the end of the book, reminding readers that stories like Peggy's belonged to real people.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

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.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Williams (The Dictionary of Lost Words) brilliantly weaves a new thread into her world of words at Oxford University. Peggy Jones has been told her whole life to bind the books, not read them, but as a child her love of words grew despite her limited access. Now, as the Great War looms and steals Britain's men and boys, the women of the Oxford University bindery must step into new roles to keep their small town running. Between volunteering to read to wounded soldiers, welcoming Belgian refugees, and taking on the tasks of the men who have left for battle, Peggy loses hope that her own desire for a higher education will ever come to be. Relentless in her pursuit of knowledge, she pushes past her own fears into a new, unknown world. With heartfelt characters, a bit of romance, and a bleak and deeply sad place in time, Williams's novel is a deft story about the meaning of words, who is allowed access, and how they're inevitably interpreted. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers who enjoy historical fiction about strong women, like the works of Kate Quinn, Beatriz Williams, and Laura Willig.--Carmen Clark

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Chapter One The paperboys shouted the news all over Jericho; our walk to work was noisy with it. 'Defend Belgian neutrality,' Maude repeated. 'Support France.' She said it all, just as the paperboys did, over and over. When we stopped at Turner's Newsagency to collect our post, the counter was crowded with people buying newspapers. 'Nothing this morning, Miss Jones,' Mr Turner said when he finally saw me. I picked up a copy of the Daily Mail and handed over a halfpenny. Mr Turner raised his eyebrows; I'd never bought the paper before. Waste of a halfpenny, Ma used to say. There were always papers lying around at the Press. Maude scanned the front page as we walked along Walton Street. 'Great Britain declares war on Germany?' It was a headline and a question - she was confused by the celebrating of young men and the worry she saw on the brows of their mothers. But was she asking what war would mean for England or what it might mean for us? 'We'll be all right, Maudie.' I squeezed her hand. 'But some things may change.' I hoped they would and felt a little guilty, but not a lot. Maude continued to scan the newsprint. 'Practical hats at popular prices,' she read aloud. It was her habit, ever since she'd learnt to read. It was a skill hard earned, and although she didn't care to read a book, she loved headlines and cartoons - words already arranged and ready to use. We joined the mass of men and women, boys and girls, flowing through the stone arch of the Clarendon Press. We walked through the quad, past well-tended garden beds, the copper beech and grand pond, into the south wing of the building--the Bible side, we called it, though Bibles were now printed in London. Once inside, all the vestiges of an Oxford college gave way to the sounds and smells and textures of industry. We stored our bags and hats in the cloakroom in the bindery, took clean aprons from their hooks and made our way through the girls' side. The tables were piled high with text blocks in need of sewing, and the gathering bench was arranged with sections ready to be collated into books. The folding benches were arranged in three long rows with room for twelve women along each. They faced tall, undressed windows, and morning light spilled over quires of flat printed sheets and piles of folded sections from the day before. Lou and Aggie were already in their places at one end of the bench directly under the windows. Maude and I sat between them. 'What have they given us today?' I said to Aggie. 'Something old,' she said. She never cared what. 'You've got bits and pieces from Shakespeare's England,' said Lou. 'Proof pages. They'll take you five minutes. Then there's his complete works to keep you going for the rest of the day.' 'The Craig edition, still?' She nodded. 'Surely everyone in England has a copy of that by now.' I pulled the first proof sheet in front of me and picked up Ma's bonefolder. No one else liked folding proof pages - there were never enough to get into a rhythm - but I loved them. And I especially loved them when they kept coming back. I'd look for the changes that had been made to the text and congratulate myself if I'd anticipated them. It was a small achievement that kept the monotony of the day from sending me mad. Mrs Stoddard made a point of giving me the proofs, and everyone was grateful. I cast an eye over the printed sheets from Shakespeare's England: An Account of the Life & Manners of His Age. They were chapter proofs and likely full of errors. One I'd seen before - an essay about booksellers, printers and stationers. I'd been caught reading it the last time it came through - 'Your job, Miss Jones ...' - but it was worth the reprimand. It was about us, what we did here at the Press and how in Shakespeare's day it had been dangerous to print a book considered obnoxious to the Queen or the Archbishop of Canterbury. Off with their heads, I'd thought at the time. The other proof chapters were new: 'Ballads and Broadsides', 'The Playhouse', 'The Home'. There were fewer than there should have been. If Shakespeare's England was to be ready for the three hundredth anniversary of the Bard's death, all the proof pages needed to be coming through now. The last printed sheet was the first proper draft of the preface. I looked to see where Mrs Hogg was hovering. She was by the gathering bench, checking that the trays of sections were in the correct order. I brought the preface to the top of the stack of sheets and read a few lines: Those who want to know what Shakespeare thinks must not neglect what his fools say. It was enough to keep me going. I took up the right edge of the sheet and brought it to the left, lining up the printer's marks just so. I ran Ma's bonefolder along the crease to make it sharp. First fold. Folio. I turned it. Took up the right edge and brought it to the left. It was double the thickness and there was a slight increase in resistance. I adjusted the pressure on Ma's bonefolder - instinct, not thought. I made the crease sharp. Second fold. Quarto. Ma's bonefolder. I still called it that despite its being mine for the past three years. It was nothing more than a flat bit of cow bone, rounded at one end and with a point at the other. But it was silken smooth from decades of use, and it still held the shape of her hand. It was subtle, but bonefolders, like wooden spoons and axe handles, wear the character of their owner's grasp. I'd taken up Ma's bonefolder before Maude could claim it. I'd wrestled with the way it felt in my hand the same way I'd wrestled with Ma's absence. Stubbornly. Refusing to yield. Eventually, I'd stopped trying to hold it my way, and I'd let the bonefolder settle into my palm as it had once settled into Ma's. I'd felt the gentle curve of the bone where her fingers had lain. And I'd sobbed. Mrs Stoddard rang her bell and I let the memory go. 'There's to be a parade,' she said. 'A farewell for the Press men who are in the Territorial Army and others who've managed to volunteer since the announcement was made.' The announcement. She couldn't get her tongue around war, not yet. There were more than fifty of us bindery girls - the youngest twelve, the oldest beyond sixty - and all of us followed Mrs Stoddard through the corridors of the Press as if we were schoolgirls on an excursion. When our chatter became too much, our forewoman stopped, turned and held a finger to her lips. Like schoolgirls, we obeyed, and only then did I understand what this war might mean for us: the print house was utterly silent. The presses had been stopped. I'd never known it to be quiet and was suddenly unnerved. We all felt it, I think, because our chatter didn't resume until we came into the quadrangle. Six hundred men and boys were already gathered there. Mrs Stoddard ushered us forward, and I realised that almost every family in Jericho was represented. There were machine minders and compositors, foundry men, mechanics and readers. Apprentices, journeymen and foremen alike. They were gathered in groups according to their occupation; the state of their aprons and hands made it easy to recognise them. They filled the spaces between the Bible side and the Learned side, around the pond, between the garden beds and all the way back toward the house where Mr and Mrs Hart lived. We'd never gathered like this, and I was impressed by our number; then I realised that at least half the men were of fighting age, or soon would be. I studied the crowd. Older men passed the time in quiet conversation; younger men were more animated, some congratulating friends, others boasting that the Kaiser didn't stand a chance. 'It's bound to last more than a year,' I heard one lad say. 'I hope so,' said his friend. They were barely sixteen. Two foremen, dressed in the uniform of the Territorial Army instead of their Press aprons, tried to bring the younger recruits into line, but the lads were bursting with details of the night before. Those who'd been outside Buckingham Palace held court. They told of the crowd and the crush, the countdown to midnight, the cheers when it was clear the Kaiser would not retreat from Belgium and that England would go to war. 'It's our duty to defend Belgium,' said one, 'so we sang "God Save the King" at the top of our lungs.' 'God save us all,' said a gravelly voice behind me. I turned and saw old Ned shaking his head. He removed his cap and held it to his chest, his gnarled and ink-stained fingers worrying the fabric. When he dropped his head, I thought it was in prayer. Then a voice, clear and familiar. Maude singing 'God Save the King' at the top of her lungs. 'That's it, Miss Maude,' shouted Jack Rowntree. Excerpted from The Bookbinder: A Novel by Pip Williams All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.