Dimensions
155 x 235 x 28mm
Margaret Drabble explores the history of the jigsaw alongside her own personal pursuit of what Boswell called the 'innocent soothing relief from melancholy' found in puzzles and board games. In The Pattern in the Carpet she describes the history of this uniquely British form of meditation, from its earliest incarnation as a dissected map, used as a teaching tool in the late eighteenth century, to the intricate word-play of Georges Perec and the world's hardest five-thousand piece jigsaw - a Jackson Pollock painting. Woven carefully through her account are the author's intimate memories of her Auntie Phyl - her childhood visits to the house in Long Bennington on the Great North Road, their first visit to London together, the books they read and, above all, the jigsaws that they completed.
The resulting book is an original and moving personal history about ageing and the authenticity of memory, about the importance of childhood play; and how we rearrange objects into new patterns to make sense of our past and ornament our present. It will delight and transport its readers.