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59 pages 1 hour read

Jennifer Ryan

The Wedding Dress Sewing Circle: A Novel

Jennifer RyanFiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2019

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Summary and Study Guide

Overview

The Wedding Dress Sewing Circle is a historical fiction novel by Jennifer Ryan. It tells the intertwined stories of three British women during World War II. Grace Carlisle, Cressida Wescott, and Violet Wescott are all affected by Nazi bombings and Britain’s clothing shortage and government rations of clothing materials. They come together in a village sewing circle to help locals mend and trade clothing to get through the war, and each protagonist experiences her own journey of growth and love.

This guide refers to the 2022 Penguin Random House edition.

Content Warning: The source material features depictions of war, including bombings and post-traumatic experiences.

Plot Summary

During World War II, Grace Carlisle and her father, the town vicar, find her mother’s wedding dress. They hope that Grace will be able to wear it for her own wedding. Grace deems the moth-eaten dress too difficult to repair in the few months she has before the wedding, but her father, Ben, encourages her to not lose hope and take it to the Sewing Circle to see what they can do to help.

Cressida Wescott, who runs a fashion design business in London, insists to her reporter friend, Muriel, that she will not leave for the countryside, despite the bombings. Muriel urges her to develop a life outside of her business, but Cressida says she needs nothing more; alone, she admits to feeling lonely.

Violet Wescott mourns the effect the war has had on fashion and on the rest of her life in the aftermath of her father’s death. She expected a proposal from a titled man, but the man died while serving in the Air Force. Her brother, Hugh, works for the war office in London and has neglected the family estate ever since he inherited it upon his father’s death. Violet is drafted as part of the National Service Act and conscripted to serve in the war efforts, which she looks down on. Hugh offers to get her a position as a driver.

Cressida wakes in the middle of the night to the sounds of bombing in her neighborhood. She flees her home with only her coat and purse, and she discovers that both her home and her fashion house have been destroyed. Cressida realizes that she must reach out to her niece and nephew for temporary shelter, despite the fact that she hasn’t spoken to their father, her brother, in decades. Hugh agrees to shelter her, and Cressida heads back toward Aldhurst, the village where she grew up and the place to which she has not returned since her fiancé died in World War I.

Once settled in Aldhurst Manor, Cressida joins Violet at a meeting of the Sewing Circle, of which Violet is the figurehead leader. She meets Grace, the daughter of Cressida’s childhood friend. The Sewing Circle women discuss the impossibility of fixing Grace’s mother’s dress. Cressida suggests taking the dress apart and making a new dress out of the fabric.

Violet goes to training to become a military driver, which is far more difficult than Hugh led her to believe. It is made even more difficult when Violet, one of the few upper-class women there, is singled out for her uppity behavior and treated more harshly than the others. One of the women conducting medical exams claims Violet has lice, and the embarrassment of having her hair forcefully shorn humbles Violet. The difficulties of training leave her exhausted and more willing to follow orders, and she discovers that she has a head for mechanics. With Cressida’s support and some difficult truths from one of her fellow trainees, her perspective alters, and she is determined to choose her own path in life and excel in her work.

Grace and Hugh, who were childhood friends, rebuild their friendship when Hugh listens to Grace’s critiques about his and his father’s treatment of the village. He learns about the villagers and their needs by accompanying Grace on her parish visits, and he learns the value of supporting his local community rather than ignoring it for the sake of his war office work in London. Grace struggles with her feelings for Hugh and her growing apprehension about marrying Lawrence, the vicar. Lawrence’s treatment of her, although respectful, makes Grace question their engagement even more; he seems to value her for her parish work rather than for herself, and he disapproves of her growing interest in fashion. Grace’s interest grows as she builds her skills with Cressida, who has taken Grace under her wing. Cressida encourages Grace, suggesting that Grace pursue fashion and pointing out how important it is to marry for love rather than settling.

Violet is stationed at a nearby manor, allowing her to live at home, where she builds new relationships with the women of the Sewing Circle. She apologizes for her past behavior and joins them in earnest. She also builds a friendship with Lieutenant Landon MacCauley, the American soldier to whom she is assigned for driving duties and a man she had once looked down on after meeting him at a party.

Grace calls off her engagement, realizing that she would rather be alone than marry for the wrong reasons and consign herself to a life she no longer wants. Hugh, not realizing Grace had changed her mind, goes to London and makes his childhood betrothal to an upper-class heiress official. Grace is devastated, and the younger women of the Sewing Circle decide to take her to a military dance in Canterbury to take her mind off things. Violet is shocked when Grace downs several drinks and seems determined to act completely out of her normal character, dancing and kissing a marine on the dance floor.

Nazis bomb Canterbury that night in an attempt to destroy the cathedral, a cultural heritage site. Violet and MacCauley go to the bomb shelter together, and the fear of death leads them to kiss, realizing their feelings for one another. Grace does not seek shelter; instead, she helps the people defending the cathedral from destruction by passing sandbags to put out fires and throwing incendiaries away from the cathedral when they land. In the aftermath, she saves children from their burning home; she and two of the children are trapped for some time underneath a collapsed portion of the building, but they are saved when someone hears them calling out for help. The evening helps Grace understand why so many people have been throwing caution to the wind and living for the moment. She nearly goes home with the marine from the dance, but Hugh finds her and drives her back to Aldhurst. They argue, but Hugh is determined to do his duty by his new fiancée. Weeks later, when Hugh returns to the manor to show his fiancée around, Grace confronts Hugh one last time, putting her heart on the line. His fiancée sees them kiss, and Grace thinks Hugh has chosen his fiancée over her when he leaves.

Violet and MacCauley embark on a secret relationship since relationships between officers and drivers are forbidden. Violet decides to pursue officer training, and on the night before she leaves, MacCauley proposes. Finally freeing herself from the upper-class expectations that have been drilled into her, Violet says yes.

Inspired by Grace’s lending of the re-made wedding dress to one of the younger members (and then to Violet, whose mother, they discover, first owned the dress and then lent it to Grace’s mother), the Sewing Circle embarks on a new endeavor: the Wedding Dress Exchange. They collect wedding dresses, fix up those that need repairs or updating, and lend the dresses to women who want a white dress for their wedding but cannot get one due to Britain’s wartime clothing restrictions.

At Violet’s wedding, Hugh reveals he broke off his engagement and that he still loves Grace, and they are engaged several weeks later. Ben, Grace’s father, with whom Cressida rebuilt a childhood friendship, confesses his love for Cressida, but she rejects his request that she stay in Aldhurst. She is afraid to marry someone and possibly lose the life she has built for herself after freeing herself from her family’s expectations as a young woman. She returns to London, where she sets up a new location for her fashion house and rents a flat. She dives into work as she once did, but her loneliness is more acute than ever before. Ben shows up a few weeks after her return to London and proposes, emphasizing that he does not want Cressida to give up her life and professional success. Cressida says yes.

Cressida moves in with Ben before their wedding, not caring what the villagers might think. Grace and Hugh are married. At their reception, Hugh gives a speech about the importance of community, and Grace’s speech addresses the wedding dress that she has now shared with Violet and another woman from the Sewing Circle. She highlights how the dress and the wedding dress exchange provide hope and allow women across Britain to show that they will not be cowed by the Nazis and that they will create joy even as they face the difficulties of war.

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By Jennifer Ryan