These Tangled Threads by Sarah Loudin Thomas

Publication April 2, 2024-Bethany House-Christian-Historical Fiction-Romance-368pp

Book Summary

Set in the shadow of Biltmore Estate, a poignant tale of friendship, restoration, and second chances.

Seven years ago, a hidden betrayal scattered three young friends living in the shadow of the great Vanderbilt mansion. Now, when Biltmore Industries master weaver Lorna Blankenship is commissioned to create an original design for Cornelia Vanderbilt’s 1924 wedding, she panics knowing she doesn’t have the creativity needed. But there’s an elusive artisan in the Blue Ridge Mountains who could save her–if only she knew where to begin.

To track down the mysterious weaver, Lorna sees no other way than to seek out the relationships she abandoned in shame. As she pulls at each tangled thread from her past, Lorna is forced to confront the wounds and regrets of life long ago. She’ll have to risk the job that shapes her identity, as well as the hope of friendship–and love–restored.

Grateful Reader Review by Dorothy Schwab

George Washington Vanderbilt III first welcomed family and friends to the sprawling Biltmore Estate on Christmas Eve, 1895. Author Sarah Thomas ushers readers across the threshold of the estate twenty-eight years later; after the premature death of George Vanderbilt in 1914 and the North Carolina flood of 1916. These catastrophic events form the breathtaking, dramatic backdrop of These Tangled Threads.

George’s widow, Edith and 14-year-old daughter, Cornelia, forged ahead, running the estate and its eighty person staff. George had established Biltmore Village in 1889, which included a school, a church, hospital, and cottages to house and support the laborers and artisans working on the estate. By 1901 the Vanderbilts had created Biltmore Industries, the apprenticeship program designed to teach woodworking and weaving. This is where fictional characters Lorna, Arthur and Gentry learned their trades. The devastating flood of 1916 created a financial burden for the Vanderbilt estate, forcing Edith to sell Biltmore Industries in 1917, to Fred Seely of nearby Grove Park Inn, which had opened in 1913.

Sarah Thomas deftly weaves daily life at Biltmore House, the Village, and the Industries, with the life altering effects of the flood of 1916. Thomas uses Lorna’s deceit and guilt, Gentry’s loneliness and search for her mother, and Arthur’s rejection as a child to reveal identifiable and relatable emotions through memories and thoughts. They have endured family challenges, the loss of loved ones, and decisions made either out of love and desperation or selfishness and pride. Thomas creates angst and suspense as the defining threads in the lives of the characters unravel through heartbreak, reflection, and regret. By Lorna’s “reckoning day” the threads of illumination and understanding are rewoven into a glistening tapestry of confession and forgiveness. Through loving, compassionate conversations Sarah Loudin Thomas effectively and passionately shares that God’s grace is not earned, it is a gift. A gift of Amazing Grace. These Tangled Threads: Uplifting and Redeeming

Sarah Loudin Thomas (sarahloudinthomas.com) is the author of numerous acclaimed novels, including The Finder of Forgotten ThingsThe Right Kind of Fool, winner of the 2021 Selah Book of the Year, and Miracle in a Dry Season, winner of the 2015 INSPY Award. She worked in public relations for Biltmore Estate for six years and is now the director of Jan Karon’s Mitford Museum. A native of West Virginia, she and her husband now live in western North Carolina. 

Facts and Photos to extend the visit to Asheville, North Carolina

The settings of Biltmore House, Biltmore Village, and Biltmore Industries each play a key role in the novel. Here are a few facts about Biltmore House.

Written by Rachel D. Carley, Rosemary G. Rennick, ISBN 1-885378-01-7-Published by The Biltmore Company-116p-Softcover

“On Christmas Eve, the country retreat George Vanderbilt has spent so long planning is marvelously decorated and full of festivity. The finished home contains more than four acres of floor space, including 35 bedrooms, 43 bathrooms, and 65 fireplaces. ” A wonderful site for history & timeline: https://www.biltmore.com/our-story/biltmore-history/estate-timeline/

Building Biltmore=Over a thousand artisans and six years

Naming Biltmore- “Bildt”-Dutch town of George’s ancestors, “More”-old English for open, rolling land.

Designing Biltmore-Richard Morris Hunt-architect for The Breakers and Marble House, Newport, RI, the main façade of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, pedestal for Statue of Liberty and Biltmore Estate

Landscaping Biltmore-Frederick Law Olmstead-Landscape Architect- New York Central Park, U. S. Capitol grounds, Stanford University campus, Biltmore Estate

Gardening at Biltmore-Chauncey Beadle-Canadian Horticulturist remained on the estate for 60 years.

Celebrating Biltmore-Opened Christmas Eve 1895

“Oh, what a tangled web we weave When first we practice to deceive.” Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field, Sir Walter Scott The famous quote aptly represents the theme of this novel.

Novels Set at Biltmore House Reviewed by Grateful Reader

Under a Gilded Moon by Joy Jordan Lake : https://gratefulreader.home.blog/2021/12/01/under-a-gilded-moon-by-joy-jordan-lake/

The Wedding Veil by Kristy Woodson Harvey https://gratefulreader.home.blog/2022/03/29/the-wedding-veil-by-kristy-woodson-harvey/

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