Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Unraveled Wednesday: 8/10/22

I'm joining Kat and fellow Unravelers for Unraveled Wednesday, with very s-l-o-w progress on the Baby Surprise Jacket. I knit in the car on the way up to my SiL's and then got to the somewhat crazy row 80: k124, turn, k90, turn, k90, [turn, k90] 18x, knit up 10 sts from edge of flap, k34. 


I didn't feel like I could keep track of where I was and get this row knit correctly during John's stop-and-go driving during 12 miles of construction on Route 80, so I put it away for the weekend and just started working on crazy row 80 yesterday. I only have a couple more k90s to do, and then 17 more rows before the end, but I will be glad to see the end of this project. My fingers are itching to work on a Hitchhiker!

I finished a book from the Booker Longlist, Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies, and even though I wrote a review, I'm still not sure how I feel about it. There is a very fine line between pushing the form of the novel and becoming so inventive that you create something far too strange. I can't tell which side of the line Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies lies on. The book starts out telling the story of Lia who has been diagnosed with recurrent breast cancer and her relationships with her daughter Iris and husband Harry. Iris is a very perceptive child and some of her experiences at school are more than a child should have to bear. There is a disembodied voice in bold type that I took to be the personification of Lia's disease - disorienting but effective. There is also interesting non-linear typography that I found to be mostly distracting. Lia's story of growing up in a vicarage, her parents taking in a young man named Peter, and their eventual sexual relationship is told in bits and pieces. As Lia grows sicker, the voice of her disease begins to take over the narrative. My mother died of metastatic breast cancer, and the malevolent voice of Lia's disease was almost more than I could stand to read at times. Maddie Mortimer has written a unique, sad, and poignant debut novel, based on her own experience with her own mother, but I don't think it was a book for me. 

I couldn't settle on anything new that I wanted to read so I decided that some re-reads were in order. The Shipping News is an old favorite and I'm also re-listening to Everything I Never Told You. Sometimes special re-reads are just what is needed. 


What are you making and reading this week?

11 comments:

  1. I need to knit this pattern....hm. Love the color you chose!

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  2. Your BSJ looks lovely, but I'm glad you are knitting it and not me! LOL "Maps..." sounds too depressing for me. But "The Shipping News" - what a great book. Enjoy your re-read of that.

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  3. Those last rows of the BSJ are long, but you're getting very close to the end and the fun origami moment!

    I appreciate your review of Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies. I think I'll wait to see if it makes the short list before I decide whether or not to read it.

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  4. The usual makes ....socks, blankets, etc... I'm reading Funny Farm. It's about a lady that runs a rescue farm near Turnersville, NJ. She was on 6 news a few weeks ago and it sounded interesting. She had a talk at Frenchtown Books too, but I didn't make it to go see her.

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  5. Oh, the "crazy row"! It's just like a heel flap in a top-down sock, if that helps!

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  6. Sometimes a re-read is just the ticket. And I think your BSJ is looking great, you'll be done in no time now.

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  7. That EZ is such a genius ... you really do have to just trust her and go with it! and thank you for those thoughts on Maps. I started the book yesterday and am loving it (although the typography recalls Lanny ... and I'm not sure I like it for that reason - I wish this were my first time encountering it) ... of course I don't have a first-hand experience with the cancer she's describing and I can only imagine how that would affect my reading.

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  8. I couldn't agree more about re-reads, Bonny! Sometimes they're the most perfect answer to what we need. (I was going to type "just the ticket" but I see Carole beat me to it!!!) I've always avoided the BSJ because sometimes I don't want to think that hard when I knit. You haven't convinced me otherwise . . . but yours does look fabulous. XO

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  9. I missed this post yesterday, so I got a twofer today! I have picked up and tried to read several books lately, so the advice to re-reads is timely. I will have to look at some old favorites. I am sorry you have not enjoyed knitting the BSJ because it is going to be a great gift. Oh, and you were missed, hope you enjoyed your break!

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  10. I am loving your BSJ! (the genius of dear Elizabeth Z just amazes me the most with that little baby sweater!)

    Thank you for your insightful review of Maps... I think that will be a book I pass on, at least for the time being. I am currently listening to Sorrow and Bliss and I have Trust waiting in the wings!

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  11. You are making great progress on the Baby Surprise Jacket. I wonder what yarn/color you will choose for the next Hitchhiker. Maybe it wouldn't hurt to just cake up the yarn so you are ready to cast on. You are so right about the fine line between being pushing the form of the novel and being too inventive. Sometimes the "too inventive" feels like a gimmick the writer uses to make up for less than stellar writing.

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