I'm joining Kat and fellow Unravelers for the first Unraveled Wednesday in 2024! The year feels fresh and new, but I'm working on a project left over from last year - the Funfetti Hitchhiker. The first picture shows the whole thing but it looks so dull that it almost seems like I took a black and white photo. The second picture shows a closeup of the lovely colorful confetti bits that keep me knitting.
I'm at 40 teeth and close to adding in the second skein. I hope to finish the Hitchhiker soon(ish) by knitting on it monogamously. I have some ideas for the yarnover rows when I'm done but I'm not sure if they will work or not. My next cast on will be Sarah's lovely design, Hydrophily (ravelry link). I dug through my stash looking for yarn that might work but I have a fairly definite idea of what I want, so I've ordered yarn that I hope will look like what I'm picturing. I want to be finished with this current Hitchhiker so I can cast on when the yarn arrives. It might be as long as four to six weeks before it's dyed and delivered, but I am excited about what I finally chose.
I only finished one book in the last week, but I feel like I worked hard for this finish. It's not that I don't enjoy long books, but I like them to say something on all those pages. For me, The Bee Sting drifted aimlessly for far too much of its length, especially during the Imelda and Dickie sections. I won't even harp on the lack of punctuation in Imelda's section but I was glad when it was done. I found the ending to be an absurd, far-fetched, disappointing cliffhanger, but there was a big sense of relief at finally finishing the book. It took me eight days to read this but it felt more like 80.
It wasn't all bad. Paul Murray has written an interesting family story that kept me reading until the end. I was glad to read the bits of humor and wittiness as they helped. Stronger editing and a bit of punctuation could have made this a four-star book for me. If I could only figure out what happened at the end, it might even be five stars!"We need to take off our masks …. And that's hard, after a lifetime of hiding away, it's existentially hard, take it from me. But once you do it, the world is transformed. Once you take off your mask, it's like all the other masks become transparent, and you can see that beneath our individual quirks and weirdnesses, we're the same. We are the same in being different, in feeling bad about being different. Or to put it another way, we are all different expressions of the same vulnerability and need. That's what binds us together. And once we recognize it, once we see ourselves as a community of difference, the differences themselves no longer define us. That's when we can start to work together and things can change."
What are you making and reading this week?
That's a really fun Hitchhiker. I've made a few in my time. It just might be cold enough now to dig them out and give them a wash.
ReplyDeleteHitchhikers are my potato chip knitting and I don't know if I'm proud or ashamed to say that this is my 27th one. I've given away quite a few but wear one almost every day in the winter.
DeleteI think a confetti Hitchhiker might be the perfect thing to welcome spring! And I can't wait to see what you have picked for your Hydrophilly!
ReplyDeleteMy reading this week included Starter Villain (which I finished last night) and Jimin Han's The Apology.
the most delightful hitchhiker and the confetti yarn makes it a perfect January knit even if it's from last year. I have two projects from last year I hope to finish up soon.
ReplyDeleteA Funfetti Hitchhiker is so fun Bonny! A bright and cheerful knit for the winter days. I tried to read The Bee Sting - I think I got to the Imelda section and the no punctuation did me in! I returned it to the library for someone else to sstruggle over. Ha! My reading is slow (a slump of sorts?), but I have 3 knitting projects going on: socks, a hat and fingerless mitts. Enough to keep me busy I think!
ReplyDeleteWhat a powerful quote! So true. So true. I recently had conversations that ring of this -- one with a 12-year-old and one with a 75-year-old. Which says it all.
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to finish up in time for Tuesday's Read With Us, and I'm listening to my first Geraldine Brooks on audio. I've also started a year with Comfort of Crows and am finding it very hard to stop with each week's 'installment'!
That quote was the best thing about The Bee Sting for me, but it is powerful. I couldn't stop when I read Comfort of Crows; it may be time for a (slower?) reread.
DeleteThat Hitchhiker makes me want a big piece of confetti cake w/sprinkles on top!!
ReplyDeleteI love all the colors in this Hitchhiker -- it's definitely worth looking at it closer!
ReplyDeleteUnsurprisingly, I had the same issues with the lack of punctuation in Imelda's sections of the book. Reading them was a real slog. I get that it was a way of giving her a distinctive voice, but it was so annoying. And I also didn't love the ending, but I can see how the ambiguity makes for a good discussion, if that's what he was going for.
Bonny, just wanted you to know I watched Openheimer over the weekend and thought of your son (although I couldn't remember if it was your's or Dee's, but I did remember that someone with a knitting blog had a son who worked on the pond area for the film). What a great movie! Happy New Year! Love your hitchhiker.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kim! My son Justin works at IAS where some of the movie was filmed, so he was the pond guy. I haven't watched the movie yet, but I'll be sure to watch for the "best supporting scenery" when I do!
DeleteI love that HH, Bonny. I have often thought of knitting a Funfetti sweater because it would be cheerful, and it would go with everything! In my world, there is a lot to be said for cheerful things, whatever they may be. (I have a bright yellow coffee cup that helped me get through my divorce years ago. It made me smile every morning.)
ReplyDeleteThat quote! Very profound as well as powerful. I find here at the end of my life that I am able to ponder these types of literature with much greater appreciation that I could have when I was young. I consider it one of the perks of experience and age. Based on reviews of the book, I don't think this is a book for me, but I am delighted you shared the quote with me.
That is such a fun Hitchhiker with that confetti yarn! And I completely agree about The Bee Sting. What a slog!
ReplyDeleteYour Confetti looks like Sprinkles to me ... in the most fun way! I'm also slowly reading Comfort of Crows and getting anxious about not seeing "my" first bird of the year yet.
ReplyDeleteI sure do like the Confetti in that yarn. I look forward to seeing the yarn you ordered for the new shawl. That is such a pretty pattern. I'm working on a shawl and some fingeless mitts but itching to cast on a sweater.
ReplyDeleteI am about 50 pages into The Bee Sting and not terribly excited about it. After reading your review I my just put it down in favor of something else on my TBR pile.
ReplyDeleteI think your Funfetti Hitchhiker is my favorite of ALL your Hitchhikers! I love the yarn -- and I think it's perfect for showing off those yarn-overs. XO
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