I love my library!

  • Diane Setterfield: The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel

    Diane Setterfield: The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel
    A fat, Gothic novel full of ghosts and mysteries and lots and lots of plot. Yowza. Get yourself to the library now!

  • Kathleen Kent: The Heretic's Daughter: A Novel

    Kathleen Kent: The Heretic's Daughter: A Novel
    It's such a cliché to say a book is heartbreaking. This is a story of a 9-year-old girl and her mother, imprisoned during the Salem witch trials. Finding a place in your family, in your community, in your own heart, seems like it ought to be simple, automatic even, but this girl's struggle cut right to the middle of me.

  • Simonetta Agnello Hornby: The Almond Picker: A Novel

    Simonetta Agnello Hornby: The Almond Picker: A Novel
    What if the main character died on--or even before--the very first page? And everything you learned about her came second-hand, through the voices and memories of the people who knew her? And few of them knew her well enough to say or remember anything true? Well, you'd have a lovely mystery on your hands. And a compelling look at the human tendency to create reality instead of witnessing it.

  • Amy Bloom: Away: A Novel

    Amy Bloom: Away: A Novel
    I love a fat, 500-page novel with an eloquent, omniscient narrator who can see so far into all the character's futures that I'm left with no worries, only peace, at the end. This novel is pretty much everything I ever wanted, and it's not even 250 pages long. You'll be riveted. It'll take you three days, max.

  • Tracy Kidder: Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World

    Tracy Kidder: Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World
    It's so hard not to look away from pain and suffering and poverty. Paul Farmer does not look away. He's right there, fighting on the losing side, because it's the right thing to do. I'm glad I read this at the start of the holiday season. I need the perspective.

  • Luis Alberto Urrea: The Hummingbird's Daughter

    Luis Alberto Urrea: The Hummingbird's Daughter
    The first book for the new book-club year. I started early because it's a nice thick book, and I often have a hard time getting a whole book read in a month (so sad), but then I read it all in about four days. It's fabulous. Makes Mexico seem like it has a magic, majestic soul.

  • Dodie Smith: I Capture the Castle

    Dodie Smith: I Capture the Castle
    How did I manage to check this out of the library at the same time as Cold Comfort Farm? I must have seen them recommended together somewhere. Turns out, this is exactly the sort of novel CCF is spoofing. Happily, I'm enjoying it anyway. If you get a wild hair to read both of these, do read CCF first.

  • Stella Gibbons: Cold Comfort Farm (Oxford Bookworms Library)

    Stella Gibbons: Cold Comfort Farm (Oxford Bookworms Library)
    I'd never read any of the genre of novels that this book is meant to spoof, but I enjoyed it immensely anyway. It was especially fun to read semi-aloud in my horrific British accent. The only thing I didn't like about the book was that my edition had awful cover art. I like this cow so much better.

  • Charles de Lint: Widdershins (Newford)

    Charles de Lint: Widdershins (Newford)
    If you liked Neil Gaiman's American Gods, give this one a try. I liked them both, and think I need to check out The Onion Girl which is evidently the beginning of these characters' stories.

  • Lauren Groff: The Monsters of Templeton

    Lauren Groff: The Monsters of Templeton
    If this book had sprouted an extra head or a bunch of tentacles while I was reading, thereby assuring that there would have been even more to read, I would have been ecstatic. This is a really good one!

  • Philippa Gregory: The Other Boleyn Girl

    Philippa Gregory: The Other Boleyn Girl
    Fiction is definitely my preferred means of learning about history--that's awful, I know, but it seems marginally better than movies, yes? This book is great: very informative with plenty of um, well, OK, sex.... Sex makes history more interesting, don't you think?

  • Neil Gaiman: American Gods

    Neil Gaiman: American Gods
    I'm just a little way into this book and it's so mesmerizing--like watching a big spider weaving an impossible web. I can't wait to get back to it.

  • Jim Fergus: One Thousand White Women: The Journals of May Dodd

    Jim Fergus: One Thousand White Women: The Journals of May Dodd
    A crazy, beautiful, utterly doomed solution to a problem that likely couldn't have been fixed any way at all. There are so many characters with so many conflicting opinions--all right, all wrong, all so human. I loved this book.

  • Lisa See: Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel

    Lisa See: Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel
    I was mesmerized by this novel. The setting is so rich and the story so sharp. I'm not sure I can forgive the narrator, but I can definitely identify with her. Everyone has something to be ashamed of, don't they? Also, compared to foot-binding, high heels seem pretty inconsequential....

  • Barbara Kingsolver: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life

    Barbara Kingsolver: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life
    I've said before that I'm not the gardener in this family, and I'm afraid I have that lifelong fear of dirt that Kingsolver disdains, but I've never read anything before that made me want to grow all my own food. And raise chickens. And maybe cows. Goats, too...

  • Michael Malone: Dingley Falls

    Michael Malone: Dingley Falls
    I woke up one morning last week to hear Nancy Pearl on NPR say that she's been rereading this book every two years since it was first published in 1980. That's a recommendation I'm willing to take, and I'm loving this town and (almost) all of its inhabitants. Malone's narrator is removed but very tender, and all of these folks seem very, very real.

  • Joss Whedon: Fray

    Joss Whedon: Fray
    Shocked, I am shocked to find myself recommending a comic book, but here's the thing: I loved it. It even made me cry a little. If you loved Buffy and Angel, read this.

  • Erin Hart: Haunted Ground: A Novel

    Erin Hart: Haunted Ground: A Novel
    A moody, modern-day archaeological mystery set in Ireland and populated with creative people--singers, musicians, painters, even a weaver who dyes her own wools. There are several storylines going all at once which keeps it interesting, and while some of the details are gruesome, it's never a scary book.

  • Ingrid Hill: Ursula, Under

    Ingrid Hill: Ursula, Under
    This is so good, I almost can't stand to read it, because I know the more I read, the sooner it's going to be over. I'm going slow on purpose. And if you see me crying or laughing or grinning like a crazy person on the bus, this book is totally why.

  • Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex: A Novel

    Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex: A Novel
    Wow. This is a great book. You'd think that the narrator would resent his incredibly inbred family (grandparents are siblings; parents are cousins) for the compounded genetic mutations that result in his hermaphroditism. Instead, he's unfailingly warm, affectionate and empathetic. I couldn't help but love every character. But damned if I could figure out why his older brother is named Chapter Eleven...

Organized Craft

Loves me, loves me not

5_20_09 007

This is the first front piece of Flower Child. All the back pieces are finished, but (you knew there'd be a "but"...) I've decided that I'm knitting the wrong size. I picked the 34 thinking negative ease is my friend, but now I'm thinking that's more negative ease than I'm strictly comfortable with. Perhaps zero ease would be a little less... revealing. No one really needs to see the clasp of my bra, right? I can't say I'm thrilled at the idea of unpicking the edges of all five (!) back pieces and lengthening them, but what the hell, it's not my first knitting miscalculation this month.

The real bummer is that I'm going to need to buy more yarn. I bought eight skeins at Churchmouse a few weeks ago, and now that I need two more, it's not really in the cards for me to take another day trip to Bainbridge. Cross your fingers that I can find the same dye lot without having to take a ferry ride.

I am into instant gratification

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It's funny, because if I was really into instant gratification--and I am, I really, really am--it seems like it would be simpler to just go and buy a sweater. But the combination of knitting and working in clothing retail has kind of ruined me for buying sweaters--I rarely feel that the price of a pre-knit sweater is justifiable. I'd mostly just rather make my own. Happily, this one is going so fast (so far) that it feels like instant gratification.

Brainylady posted her new Amelia sweater on Friday along with a Ravelry link to a bunch of other Amelias, and suddenly I needed one of my own. I made a very swift visit to the yarn store on Saturday, Christmas gift certificate in hand (thanks, honey!), and swooped up some Cascade 220. I swatched and then cast on that evening and look how fast it's going! Of course, that kind of gives you some indication of how much other stuff I've accomplished in the last few days...

A thing for ships

2_16_09 104

I grew up surrounded
by cornfields and ranch houses
and the only boats I ever sat in
were speedboats towing skiers
on flat lakes

I dreamed, though, of cresting waves
riding out storms
in a creaky wooden ship hauled by the wind
across a vast blue
I wanted the view from the captain's cabin
dark wood, candle stubs
mullioned windows washed by the sea

2_16_09 112

Today I live near the ocean
but rarely go to the beach
even rarer on a boat
maybe a ferry
which could almost be a bus

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I watch movies with tall ships
wet and filthy sailors
greening teeth
I don't like to be cold
recoil at salt crust, grime

Still
if I woke one night
and saw a boat outside my window
I'd steal aboard

2_16_09 124
____________________________________________________

Ribbon-Trimmed Cardigan, a Blue Sky Alpacas pattern knit up in Reynolds Whiskey.

Exhaustive details probably of interest to very few people:

I bought the ribbon a year or two ago from some company that was having a clearance sale. The ribbon was half off, so I splurged on two yards' worth, and then just kept it stashed away waiting for the right project. I liked this cardigan when I saw it, but might not have knit it if I hadn't already had the ribbon.

The lace is an organic cotton lace I got from Near Sea Naturals. It's not as soft as I expected it to be, but I really loved that the shape of it mimics the cable pattern.

I finished the principal knitting on this one quite quickly--I think within a month--but then I put it aside to think about Christmas stuff, and the finishing took at least another month. There was a lot of sewing it together--not a portable job since the yarn is very nearly black and the gauge is pretty small.

The pattern directions were a smidge less exhaustive than I might have liked, and I didn't figure out ahead of time that I wasn't leaving room to sew on the ribbons. My bad. I ended up knitting an extra-deep placket so there would be a little trough for the ribbon to lie flat in.

And then, oh god, it took almost a week to stitch those ribbons on. I wanted to do it by hand because I really, really didn't want to mess up the ribbon--or the sweater--and doing it by machine seemed like a sure-fire way for me to destroy both. So several evenings of teeny-tiny stitches... I think it's kind of charming way up close. Not so many people edge right up to my bust to examine the tiny hand stitches, but I know they're there.  

One last pattern detail: the sleeves on this sweater are wicked long. I have an unfortunate tendency to knit my sleeves too short, so I went ahead and knit the full length the pattern called for. They're a good three inches longer than they really need to be, but it doesn't bother me to cuff them, and when I'm cold, it's kind of nice to pull them down over my hands a bit. No complaints from me there.

I've been wearing this sweater for about three weeks now, and I really love it. It's the sort of sweater that no one even questions might be hand-knit. It's not really the height of fashion, I don't think--mermaids and octopuses may be hot on the indie scene this season, but ships are not--but it feels like mine in a way that my other sweaters don't. It's kind of like wearing my heart on my sleeve. In private. I guess you're in on my little secret now.

Yar

adjective
1. (archaic) Set for action; ready.
2. Characterized by speed and agility.

1_18_09 056  

I guess I'm going for the archaic usage here, as I certainly could not claim speed or agility on this project.

I have finally finished the knitting and the weaving and (almost) the blocking of the Slowest and Least-Blogged About Sweater I've knitted. (It has only merited one mention thus far, in an entry where I described its progress as boring to watch.) It is damply covering a large section of the guest bed just now, and despite the fact that the sleeves are about six inches longer than it seems reasonable for sleeves to be, I am quite pleased. Another day or two, and I'll be able to apply my Most Seaworthy Trims and get on with the next half-finished sweater in my queue. 

Things that are boring to watch

  • hair growing
  • golf
  • other people typing
  • that airplane/map thingy on the back of the seat in front of you that verifies that your ridiculously not-to-scale plane is indeed moving but you still haven't even made it as far as Boise, Idaho
  • eight inches of 2 x 2 ribbing in navy blue yarn

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Note: this photo is in no way representative of the yarn's actual blue-black color, but what can you do?

Studio: clean. Button: found. Sweater: finished.

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I totally bought this pattern and this yarn on a whim. I really wanted to make this sweater, but the shop didn't have the pattern yet. I stumbled across this one at the back of the Blue Sky folder and was smitten.

Blue Sky Organic Cotton is some of the softest, chunkiest yarn I have ever knit up. I was slightly panicked that it would turn into a pilly mess right in my hands, but so far, so good. I knit it extra tightly, hoping to ward off excessive stretching, and again, so far, so good. It's only the sweater's first day out though... Anything could happen.

I modified the pattern only slightly. I added a couple of extra stitches at the bust, maybe an inch total. Also, I figured I had no need for cuffed sleeves that stop right at my biggest part, so I eliminated the cuffs and shortened the sleeves just a hair. And then I only did the one buttonhole, partly because I couldn't see myself buttoning this baby up, and partly because I only had one of the perfect button in my stash.

9_8_08 010

If I were to knit this pattern again, I would knit the body in the round. It's been a long time since I last knit a sweater in pieces and the whole time I was doing it, I was thinking this was crazy. I don't hate seaming, but sheesh, why not save time?

I'm jonesing for some more sweater knitting now. Part of me is shouting Yoke! Yoke! Knit it from the top down!, but the other part is saying that ribbon-trimmed cardi would be a really nice way to showcase some extra-special ribbon I have stashed away. And then I also really like this one. That seems a little crazy, don't you think, to want to knit three patterns from one company back to back? Maybe I'll do it anyway--I never claimed I wasn't a little bit crazy.

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