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What to expect

A TELEGRAPH BOOK OF THE YEAR

'I am overwhelmed by this book. It is an absolute masterpiece. A book of such beauty and profundity, of such poetry in its emotion and observation ... I found my sense of life transformed by her writing as I often find it transformed after the exhibition of a great artist' LAURA CUMMING

Claire Wilcox has been a curator of fashion at the Victoria and Albert Museum for most of her working life. In Patch Work, she steps into the archive of memory, deftly stitching together her dedicated study of fashion with the story of her own life lived in and through clothes. From her mother's black wedding suit to the swirling patterns of her own silk kimono, her memoir unfolds in spare, luminous prose the spellbinding power of the things we wear.

In a series of intimate and compelling close-ups, Wilcox tugs on the threads that make up the fabric of our lives: a cardigan worn by a child, a mother’s button box, the draping of a curtain, a pair of cycling shorts, a roll of lace, a pin hidden in a seam. Through the eye of a curator, we see how the stories and the secrets of clothes measure out the passage of time, our gains and losses, and the way we use them to unravel and write our histories.

Critics Review

  • An uncommon delight

    Observer
  • Evokes the sensual and spiritual meaning in the fabrics we weave, wear and leave behind … Wilcox writes piercingly

    New Yorker
  • Effervescent, poetic, puzzle-like … Wilcox picks at the heartstrings

    Financial Times
  • Into this tapestry of memories Wilcox weaves a melancholy thread … The clothes are Proust’s madeleines, cocooned
    in hatboxes and airing cupboards … Gripping

    Mail on Sunday
  • In this remarkable self-portrait, fashion curator Claire Wilcox has set out mementoes of her life like objects in an exhibition. Short chapters, some only half a page, are displayed like treasures in a cabinet of curiosities … The result is magical … Her spellbinding memoir is like a cherished book of poetry, one to be dipped into over and again

    Wall Street Journal
  • Filled with dreamlike memories, this autobiography is both surprising and delightful … A strange and mesmerising piece of work, one that tears apart the usual fabric of an autobiography

    Sunday Times

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