In Karen Osborn’s moving debut, Patchwork, the lives of three sisters in a 1930’s South Carolina mill town are stitched together, like the patchwork quilts they sew from the mill scraps. Described by the New York Times Book Review as a deeply psychological drama, Patchwork is filled with forbidden love and family secrets.
Karen Osborn is the author of five novels, Patchwork, a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, Between Earth and Sky, The River Road, Centerville, winner of the Independent Publishers Gold Award, and The Music Book, which is newly published. In reviews, she’s been compared to Ian McEwan, Jodi Picoult, and Russell Banks. The New York Times has called her work, “psychologically sophisticated,” and The Washington Post has said her writing is “an extraordinary effort to engage the American condition as we find it now.” She teaches fiction writing in Fairfield University’s M.F.A. program.
This was pure hidden treasure. It fell off the library shelf when I was reaching for something else. I'm so glad I took it home with me. Osborn has pieced a quilt of female voices, each unique and compelling. It’s not a dramatic story, but I couldn’t put it down.