Threadbare

A Gilded City Series

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Pub Date 21 May 2024 | Archive Date 11 Sep 2024
Level Best Books | Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), Members' Titles

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Description

Threadbare recounts the story of an innocent but tenacious young girl who chooses marriage to Abe, a lonely widower, rather than follow her farming community north as urban development transforms rural Harlem. Convinced Abe will help her attend high school on the Lower East Side, she faces a rude awakening to the filth and disease of the tenements. Through the following decades, Tillie turns her energy and intelligence to partnering with Abe as he builds a thriving button business while she and her neighbor Sadie launch a unique garment company. Pushing back against anti-Semitic Victorian values dominating the time, she acquires wealth only to have her life upended by a devastating, unforeseen challenge. 


Threadbare recounts the story of an innocent but tenacious young girl who chooses marriage to Abe, a lonely widower, rather than follow her farming community north as urban development transforms...


A Note From the Publisher

eBook: 9781685125820

eBook: 9781685125820


Advance Praise

Rubin’s novel, Threadbare, is a classic, delicious immigrant story with a twist. Set in 19th century New York City— not the 20th— it’s loaded with history, and its protagonist, Tillie, is a headstrong, visionary teenage girl. Although Tillie becomes a woman far too fast, her indomitable spirit prevails. Her compelling story is one of resilience in the face of discrimination, economic hard times, and epidemics— and it resonates for the 21st century.

- Susan Jane Gilman, bestselling author of The Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street.

In Threadbare, Rubin weaves a vivid tapestry of hope, heartbreak, and resilience amid breath-stopping challenges, opening a window to a transformative time in women’s history.

- Audrey Blake, USA bestselling author, The Girl in his Shadow, The Surgeon’s Daughter.

Jane Rubin’s Threadbare harkens back 150 years stylistically and thematically to Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, echoing exquisitely. Universal matters such as the power of family ties, the conflict women face between marital and childrearing responsibilities versus vocational ambition, sisterhood, and emotional resonance, are richly enhanced by compelling narrative layers involving the fin de siècle German Jewish immigrant experience, NYC farming and tenement life, the development of the garment industry, access to healthcare and the agony of loss from epidemic and cancer, and women’s reproductive rights. Rubin’s loom weaves a plush pile, in fact—not threadbare—and is as rich and inviting to the touch as a tapestry of classical antiquity from which one loathes to part.

- Peter Bolo, MD; Chair Psychiatry, Overlook Medical Center, Summit, NJ

Jane Loeb Rubin wins us over again in Threadbare, the captivating prequel to her earlier novel, In the Hands of Women. Readers follow resilient Tillie Isaacson Levine from her adolescence on a farm in 1879, through her marriage and move to a Manhattan tenement, and finally to her work in the city’s garment business in the 1890s. Against all odds, given biases against women and Jews, she starts a business while raising a family. Readers will race through Threadbare, rooting for Tillie in every chapter.

- Marlie Parker Wasserman, author of Inferno on Fifth 

Rubin’s novel, Threadbare, is a classic, delicious immigrant story with a twist. Set in 19th century New York City— not the 20th— it’s loaded with history, and its protagonist, Tillie, is a...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781685125813
PRICE US$18.95 (USD)
PAGES 342

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