Summer Restoration: Rosie Dresser and The Cobblers
Description:
In 1947-having spent the better part of the war as a Red Cross volunteer with Patton's Third Army in Europe-Rosie Dresser returned to the coastal village of Somesville, Maine where she had spent long and idyllic summers as a child. Unmarried, thirty-eight years old and a Vassar dropout, she bought a decaying house built in 1852 that she named The Cobbler's and restored over the course of the summer with the active involvement of the community-summer and local. Summer Restoration:Rosie Dresser and The Cobbler's pivots around a series of fourteen letters she wrote home describing the restoration itself and the people-colorful, wry, prickly, resourceful, kind-who helped her. But resurrecting a nineteenth century house is only part of the story. Summer Restoration is about a quiet Maine village on the cusp of post-war change. And it is about Rosie Dresser, an uncommonly independent woman, whose life began in the privileged afterglow of New England's "Indian Summer" and led unpredictably to one of hard-earned accomplishment. Actress, director, front-line Red Cross volunteer, teacher, civic activist, world traveler, beneficent aunt, humorist-Rosie Dresser was very much of her time. And ahead of it, too.
Want a Better Price Offer?
Set a price alert and get notified when the book starts selling at your price.
Want to Report a Pricing Issue?
Let us know about the pricing issue you've noticed so that we can fix it.