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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=Things to Make and Mend
|author=Ruth Thomas
|buy=Yes
|borrow=Yes
|format=Paperback
|pages=356
|publisher=Faber and Faber
|date=1 Feb February 2007
|isbn=978-0571230594
|amazonukcover=<amazonuk>0571230598</amazonuk>|amazonusaznuk=0571230598|aznus=<amazonus>0571230598</amazonus>
}}
This book appealed to me in some ways right from the start. Sally Tuttle is the main heroine, who works in a sewing and mending shop. She also does serious embroidery in her spare time, and has won a competition. She is in her forties, so she was a teenage schoolgirl in the 1970s; there's a great deal of reminiscing about those days, with little snippets of observation that could have come straight from my own school-days: double needlework; rough books; bizarre conversations about chemistry during unrelated lessons; giggling about words like 'bust-line' on sewing patterns...
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