I’m happily joining Kat and the Unravelers today with one finished sock and a good start on the second. I still need to kitchener the toe on the first one, but I’ll wait until both are done. I’ve finished the heel flap on sock #2 and just need a few quiet minutes to turn the heel.
I snapped a few “sock in the wild” photos at Ryan’s house. His hydrangeas and sedum are blooming, and they made a nicer backdrop than my own parched lawn.
I did finish a book this week and it was a good one. So Far Gone by Jess Walter is an
absorbing, funny, and surprisingly tender novel about one man’s
reluctant reentry into a world he thought he’d left behind for good.
Rhys Kinnick, once a journalist and now a near-hermit in the Pacific
Northwest, finds his solitude upended when his two grandchildren appear
on his doorstep, fleeing a father who’s fallen in with a Christian
Nationalist militia. When the kids are kidnapped, Rhys, helped by a
retired detective and a sharp-tongued ex, has no choice but to face both
his past and the fractured country he’s been avoiding.
The setup
could easily veer into bleakness or satire, but somehow Walter walks a
real tightrope here. The book is very much about Our Present Moment,
with political division, disinformation, and despair, without getting
you so steeped in the terrors of the far right that it feels more like
stress than storytelling. There are moments when it's laugh-out-loud
funny, but it never feels like Walter treats his subjects too lightly.
Rhys
is a man who can be saved, a man whose ideals and disappointments are
equally large, whose disillusionment extends not just to society but to
his own moral failings. Walter treats him (and the broken country he
mirrors) with empathy and wit. The result is a story that’s humane,
sharply observed, and unexpectedly hopeful.
If Beautiful Ruins was Walter’s elegy for ambition, So Far Gone is his meditation on retreat and return, and it proves that running from the world is never the same as healing from it. This one was a solid four stars for me.
What are you making and reading this week?