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Spindle City: a Novel

ebook
2 of 3 copies available
2 of 3 copies available

Longlisted for the 2021 PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel

On June 23, 1911—a summer day so magnificent it seems as if God himself has smiled on the town—Fall River, Massachusetts, is reveling in its success. The Cotton Centennial is in full swing as Joseph Bartlett takes his place among the local elite in the parade grandstand. The meticulously planned carnival has brought the thriving textile town to an unprecedented halt; rich and poor alike crowd the streets, welcoming President Taft to America's "Spindle City."

Yet as he perches in the grandstand nursing a nagging toothache, Joseph Bartlett straddles the divide between Yankee mill owners and the union bosses who fight them. Bartlett, a renegade owner, fears the town cannot long survive against the union-free South. He frets over the ever-present threat of strikes and factory fires, knowing his own fortune was changed by the drop of a kerosene lantern. When the Cleveland Mill burned, good men died, and immigrant's son Joseph Bartlett gained a life of privilege he never wanted.

Now Joseph is one of the most influential men in a prosperous town. High above the rabble, as he stands among politicians and society ladies, his wife is dying, his sons are lost in the crowd facing pivotal decisions of their own, and the differences between the haves and have-nots are stretched to the breaking point.

Spindle City delves deep into the lives, loves, and fortunes of real and imagined mill owners, anarchists, and immigrants, from the Highlands mansions to the tenements of the Cogsworth slum, chronicling a mill town's—and a generation's—last days of glory.

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    • Booklist

      May 15, 2020
      Based on his own family's history, Burrello's fictional take on Fall River, Massachusetts, which he calls Spindle City, begins in 1911. President Taft is welcomed with much fanfare to this manufacturing center at its zenith. While confetti falls and parades roll by, mill owner Joseph Bartlett is less than celebratory, ruminating on personal tragedy. His success is both ill-gotten and one he never wanted. His beloved wife lies dying, and his eldest son's behavior is appalling. Pitted against the rich mill owners are union leaders and anarchic socialists, further complicating Bartlett's position. Burrello's tale reads like a short, one-volume family saga, and it focuses less on the zeitgeist of a mill town and more on the interpersonal relationships of the two closely connected Bartlett and the Sheehan families. From the Edwardian period to WWI and beyond, the novel follows their lives, tying everything up for the mill and town through to a 1960s epilogue. Saga fans on a time crunch will find in Burrello's debut many of the appeal factors without the typical multivolume commitment.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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