Kristen's Reviews > The Dressmaker
The Dressmaker
by Kate Alcott
The central theme in The Dressmaker is choices. We’ve all read or watched something about the tragedy of the Titanic; we know the story, the horror. But how much do we know about what came after of the guilt and the condemnation? Of the survivors trying to move on, to deal with what happened, to grieve for those lost at sea. It’s easy to sit in the comfort of our warm homes and debate the choices made that fateful night, to vilify and cast judgment, but we can never truly know the horrors seen and heard that night. Would we be a hero or a coward if put in the position of so many that night. We do know from history that only one boat went back – One Boat, after the cries of the drowning and freezing began to subside. It is enough to bring you to tears.
While the novel is fiction, the events surrounding it are historical. There was a Lady and Cosmo Gordon who survived in a lifeboat with ten other people, they did oppose going back for survivors and they did bribe seamen. In reality, they were not the only ones.
I think there is something about the name Tess in literature, it denotes a strong woman, a woman willingly to defy conventions in a time when it is not fashionable to do so. Tess Collins knew what she was worth and she wasn’t willing to compromise her values to get her where she wanted to be. She’s willing to prove herself, to make sacrifices.
There wasn’t much I didn’t find appealing in the book, it was a fast read, well researched and deeply moving. What I loved best was the idea of choices, to look at the sinking of the Titanic from a different perspective and to see your own life through Tess’. If given the choice, do you stand up for what you believe no matter what the personal cost, or do you turn your back to those you love?
The Dressmaker is a powerful story that will leave you thinking long after you have finished reading it. Not only does it put the Titanic into a new perspective but friendship and love as well. Put this book on your to be read lists, it’s well worth it.
by Kate Alcott
The central theme in The Dressmaker is choices. We’ve all read or watched something about the tragedy of the Titanic; we know the story, the horror. But how much do we know about what came after of the guilt and the condemnation? Of the survivors trying to move on, to deal with what happened, to grieve for those lost at sea. It’s easy to sit in the comfort of our warm homes and debate the choices made that fateful night, to vilify and cast judgment, but we can never truly know the horrors seen and heard that night. Would we be a hero or a coward if put in the position of so many that night. We do know from history that only one boat went back – One Boat, after the cries of the drowning and freezing began to subside. It is enough to bring you to tears.
While the novel is fiction, the events surrounding it are historical. There was a Lady and Cosmo Gordon who survived in a lifeboat with ten other people, they did oppose going back for survivors and they did bribe seamen. In reality, they were not the only ones.
I think there is something about the name Tess in literature, it denotes a strong woman, a woman willingly to defy conventions in a time when it is not fashionable to do so. Tess Collins knew what she was worth and she wasn’t willing to compromise her values to get her where she wanted to be. She’s willing to prove herself, to make sacrifices.
There wasn’t much I didn’t find appealing in the book, it was a fast read, well researched and deeply moving. What I loved best was the idea of choices, to look at the sinking of the Titanic from a different perspective and to see your own life through Tess’. If given the choice, do you stand up for what you believe no matter what the personal cost, or do you turn your back to those you love?
The Dressmaker is a powerful story that will leave you thinking long after you have finished reading it. Not only does it put the Titanic into a new perspective but friendship and love as well. Put this book on your to be read lists, it’s well worth it.
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