"Teeming with history and detail - a fascinating exploration of how even the smallest scraps of fabric can open up large stories." --Lynn Knight, author of The Button Box "The story of a singular woman. Kate Strasdin's forensic detective work has finally let Mrs. Sykes--and her book--speak again." --Judith Flanders, author of The Invention of Murder "Intriguing and engaging. A fascinating and creative unravelling of Anne's life and times." --Clare Hunter, author of Threads of Life "A vivid history of expansion and empire, all wrapped up in 2,184 pieces of cloth. If I ever were looking for a historical detective with whom to team up, Kate Strasdin would be at the top of my list." --Victoria Finlay, BBC History Magazine, author of Fabric "A vivid portrait of 19th-century life. Like an intrepid detective, Strasdin follows each thread and reconstructs Anne Sykes's life. Using a combination of highly illustrative prose and reproductions of fashion plates, the author details the evolution of fashionable silhouettes and helps us to envision how the small bits of fabric might have looked as complete garments. Strasdin's detailed explication of Victorian-era dress is sure to delight the fashion history enthusiast, but The Dress Diary has much wider appeal. A compelling narrative that challenges the 'deep-seated perception of dress as superficial and inconsequential.'"-- The New York Times Book Review
"An extraordinarily rich record of middle-class Victorian life, both at home and abroad. A fascinating book."
--Guardian
"A questing and poignant social history."--The Observer
"Snippets of fabric, snippets of biographical detail, snippets of historical evidence--this is a book entirely made up of snippets and I found it irresistible."
--The Times
"Strasdin's painstaking detective work has uncovered many of the fascinating insights behind the fabric swatches contained in this unusual collection."
--Sunday Times "An irresistible glimpse into fashion from nearly two centuries ago. It's a life in fabric; a poignant illustration of something seemingly ephemeral that has nonetheless endured."--The Seattle Times