After sixteen-year-old Helen, a young Jewish girl from Russia, comes alone across the Atlantic to the Lower East Side of New York in the year 1900, she devotes herself to bringing the rest of her family to safety and opportunity in the new world-and finds love along the way.
"In this YA novel, a young Jewish woman and her family flee persecution and seek a better life in the bustle of turn-of-the-century Manhattan. A pleasant read."
-Kirkus Reviews
"Stitching a Life is a passionate retelling of one woman's journey."
-Readers' Favorite, 5/5 stars
"A young adult audience will be drawn to the strong-willed Helen and the obstacles she has to overcome. This novel will also appeal to those interested in the diverse cultural make-up of North America and the early New York garment trade."
-Historical Novel Society
"The heroine of this story is my grandmother as well as the author's. For years I wondered about her life in Lithuania as a young girl, about her brave journey to America on her own, what her life was like when she got here, and how she met my grandfather. To my shame I never asked her about any of these things. But Mary Helen Fein has brought them all to life for me in wonderful, vivid colors, and now I see her as the young woman who eventually became my beloved old Nana."
-Julian Barry, Oscar-nominated screenwriter of Lenny and many other films
" . . . a perfect introduction to Historical Fiction (in particular the topic of the Jews, WWI and WWII) for children and adults alike! . . . focused on the bravery and the incredible things lots of people achieved."
-The Book Mermaids
"This heartfelt immigration story is far more that the story of a single family. It is the story of America and the birth of what became The American Dream for so many immigrants from all over the world. Mary Helen Fein renders this very big story by showing us the small moments of a family who sought refuge from oppression in the arms of a new and welcoming country. Touching, inspiring, and timely, this story stirs patriotism of the most intimate kind and reminds us of the deepest ideals and of this country."
-Betsy Graziani Fasbinder, author of Fire & Water and Filling Her Shoes