Cross-Stitch

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Pub Date Nov 07 2023 | Archive Date Sep 30 2023

Description

A debut novel of female friendship and coming-of-age from Jazmina Barrera, acclaimed author of Linea Nigra and On Lighthouses, translated by Christina MacSweeney.

It was meant to be the trip of a lifetime. Mila, Citlali, and Dalia, childhood friends now college aged, leave Mexico City for the London of The Clash and the Paris of Courbet. They anticipate the cafés and crushes, but not the early signs that they are each steadily, inevitably changing. 

That feels like forever ago. Mila, now a writer and a new mother, has just published a book on needlecraft—an art form so long dismissed as “women’s work.” But after learning Citlali has drowned, Mila begins to sift through her old scrapbooks, reflecting on their shared youth for the first time as a new wife and mother. What has come of all the nights the three friends spent embroidering together in silence? Did she miss the signs that Citlali needed help?

A debut novel of female friendship and coming-of-age from Jazmina Barrera, acclaimed author of Linea Nigra and On Lighthouses, translated by Christina MacSweeney.

It was meant to be the trip of a...


Advance Praise

“Never has a novel about friendship rung truer to me than this one. This is literary art at its most insightful, most tender, most wise. Cross Stitch is a soft-spoken, hyper-articulate masterpiece. ” —John Wray, author of Gone to the Wolves

“Even when Jazmina Barrera is in the business of writing novels, she can't escape the essay form. I carried Cross-Stitch with me to the Olympic Peninsula, up mountains, across miles-long sand spits and, yes, to a lighthouse (in honor of one of Barrera's early preoccupations). Barrera's Ferrante-esque novel of friendship, woven within a cultural history of sewing, makes for an engrossing story, the kind that has you drawing exclamation points in the margins with abundance. I'm amazed, silenced, by the breadth of Barrera's thinking, her manifold interests. Christina MacSweeney, returning for a third time to render Barrera's work into English, is the only translator I want to see at the helm.” —Spencer Ruchti, Third Place Books

Praise for Jazmina Barrera

“Linea Nigra is a beautiful and lucid essay about the journey across motherhood seasons – pregnancy, childbirth and first months of parenting. Far from mythologizing motherhood as an idealized state, Linea Nigra sheds light on the complex and contradictory nature of gestation: a state crossed by terrors, but also by hopes and love; a biological and spiritual mystery that concerns all human beings, as individuals and as a society.” —Fernanda Melchor, The Guardian, on Linea Nigra

“A strange, slim, hybrid book…disarmingly fresh and provocative.…[Barrera’s] is a vision of art as feminine, never truly original or new, but a cycle: art as birth and death; bodies decomposing in the dirt, the roots ‘the tree of our flesh.’” —Christine Henneberg, New York Review of Books, on Linea Nigra

“Clear-eyed and poetic…[A] generous, openhearted project inviting readers to discover what is often hidden away, unseen.” —Los Angeles Review of Books on Linea Nigra

“Eminently worthy of acclaim.” —Vogue (The Best Books of 2022 So Far) on Linea Nigra

“Lighthouses, the ‘frontier between civilization and nature,’ are places of solitude. But they are also signals of shore and home. This book is a light at the end of the tunnel, showing us places we’ll see and things we’ll do when we can go out again.” —The Paris Review on On Lighthouses

“Precise and erudite, Barrera’s writing is as alluring and arresting as the landscapes and stories it conveys. Each piece is crafted with care, imbued with Barrera’s poignant critical sense and her perspicacious ability to unravel the different levels of affect, historicity, and magnificence that constitute the everyday life of each lighthouse.” —Ignacio M. Sánchez, Los Angeles Review of Books on On Lighthouses

“A slim, idiosyncratic history of these structures and their appearances in literature—from Robert Louis Stevenson, whose father and grandfather engineered them, to Virginia Woolf, to Ray Bradbury—the book allows the reader flashes of Barrera’s emotional life amid the accumulated detail.” —Harper’s on On Lighthouses

“Never has a novel about friendship rung truer to me than this one. This is literary art at its most insightful, most tender, most wise. Cross Stitch is a soft-spoken, hyper-articulate masterpiece. ”...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781949641530
PRICE $24.00 (USD)
PAGES 224

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Average rating from 13 members


Featured Reviews

Unexpectedly beautiful. I read this book because it appealed to my love of fiber arts, but it was far beyond my expectations. Cross-stitch is a beautiful coming of age story of female friendships intertwined with the history of fiber arts and literature. The translation is seemless and I very much enjoyed the narrative structure, with jumps to the past as well as snippets of art history. Magnificent.

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I've read everything of Barrera's published in English so far, and I'm an even bigger fan now after reading "Cross-Stitch." I was wondering how her style would translate from nonfiction to fiction, and was so excited by how "Cross-Stitch" suggests that the feminist, Mexican history of embroidery grounds her style across all forms. In other words, I think this novel is a key text for readers who love Barrera's nonfiction, especially "Linea Nigra." I found this book compulsively readable, too. The friendships between the women and the secrets, shame, and stitches of their coming of age -- set against the backdrop of a feminist history of embroidery and/as art -- amounted to a fresh take on the genre, one I found convincing and powerful. I highly recommend this book: another triumph from Barrera.

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A gentle, delicate story which blends the lives of Mila, Citali and Dalia as they move through their late adolescence to adulthood, echoed with a blending of embroidery and it’s importance to women.
Their journey affects each of them deeply as their bodies and identities change.

A gorgeous poignant read from Jazmina Barrera, with the 2023 translation from by Christina Macsweeney.

Thanks to NetGalley and Two Lines press for the ARC.

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