What I’m Reading: Claire McCardell: The Designer Who Set Women Free

My Goodreads and Amazon review of Claire McCardell: The Designer Who Set Women Free by Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson (Rated 5) – Portrait of the Artist as a Young Modern. Claire McCardell: The Designer Who Set Women Free by Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson is three volumes in one: the biography of the American fashion designer who created women’s sportswear; a survey of fashion personalities and practices from its preeminence in pre-WW2 Paris to its rising prominence in postwar New York; and a history of the emergence of second-wave feminism. This weighty and well-researched book nevertheless reads as breezily and comfortably as a McCardell wrap-around dress and pair of ballet flats. As a writer myself (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I applaud Dickinson’s skill in seamlessly joining a multitude of facts with a flowing narrative. McCardell emerges as a modern designer with respect for the past, a woman at ease with her body who understands female anatomy. Above all, McCardell comes across as trusting her own instincts and respecting the desires of those she’s designing for. She believed that clothes should be a natural extension of the self and not, as male designers decreed, a means to reshape and even contort the body. I first learned about McCardell while researching my novel A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve., a fictional biography of the actor who plays the Munchkin coroner in The Wizard of Oz and later (as I imagined), tired of having to shop in the children’s department, opens a clothing line labeled “Big People Clothes for Little People.” He too designs for his clients. McCardell was lauded in her era, but I was dismayed that, despite being a staunch second-wave feminist since its earliest days, I had never heard of her before. Hopefully, Dickinson’s engaging and informative book will patch that hole in the fabric of fashion history and introduce McCardell to a new generation.

A designer who understood what modern American women wanted to wear

Why writers read: “To read is to voyage through time.” – Carl Sagan

Famous Friends: Charlotte and Wilbur

In E. B. White’s classic children’s book Charlotte’s Web, Wilbur the pig is in danger of being slaughtered until Charlotte the spider spins a web proclaiming him “Some Pig!” That and her subsequent laudatory messages, including “Humble” at the State Fair, save his life. Charlotte dies after spinning her last web but the sac with the 514 eggs of her babies inside guarantees the legacy of their friendship. Read The Sister Knot about two resilient women, orphaned in WW2, who defy fate to save each other and sustain a lifelong friendship. A compelling novel about the power of sisterhood. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

A beloved classic about the cycle of life and death

Two resilient women, two separate journeys, one lasting friendship

Famous Friends: Marie Curie and Albert Einstein

The scientists shared curiosity and had mutual respect for each other’s work. He sent her a supportive fan letter after she was attacked in the press. Their “sublime and unclouded friendship” lasted for twenty years, and they considered themselves lucky to have known each other. Read The Sister Knot about two resilient women, orphaned in WW2, who defy fate to sustain a lifelong friendship. A compelling novel about the power of sisterhood. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

Albert Einstein was a “fan” and friend of Marie Curie

Two resilient women, two separate journeys, one lasting friendship