Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Unraveled Wednesday: 1/10/24

I'm joining Kat and fellow Unravelers with a Hitchhiker picture that doesn't look much different than the one I posted last week. It's raining buckets and the wind is picking up outside, so all I have is a gloomy indoor photo. Even my attempt to make it a little more cozy with a candle didn't entirely work. But I've joined the second skein and will keep plugging along, dreaming multicolored Funfetti dreams while I knit. 

I finished two books last week. The first one was While You Were Out: An Intimate Family Portrait of Mental Illness in an Era of Silence by Meg Kissinger. While I applaud Meg Kissinger for all the work and painful emotions that I imagine it must have taken to write her family's memoir of mental illness, I don't think it was an especially intimate portrait. Kissinger and her seven siblings were raised by a mother who was hospitalized for anxiety and depression and a bipolar alcoholic father. The author recounts a lot of family history at the beginning of the book but then steps back to tell the story of how the children grew up with drug abuse, depression, and multiple suicide attempts, but after each crisis "we simply went back to our old routines with no therapy or family discussions. None.” Kissinger became a journalist writing about mental health and with the help and cooperation of her siblings, pieced together their excruciating childhood.

I think this book is most useful for the author and her family. It would have helped me to better understand the author's siblings if she had included some of her interviews with them and their voices. I was left with questions about what roles genetics may have played and how much damage was done by parents who couldn't talk about things. Much of this happened in the 1970s when it was the norm not to discuss mental health. Even though I think many people now are better able to understand that mental health is just as important as physical health, resources are still hard to come by.

One of the things I liked most about the book was that the author chose to use a part of Mary Oliver's "In Blackwater Woods" as an epigraph. It struck me as especially appropriate for this sad memoir.
you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it

against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it
go,
to let it go.

The other book was an advance reader copy from NetGalley and it was the perfect book to read during a recent winter storm. The Wedding People by Alison Espach is the story of Phoebe who has reached what she feels is the nadir in her life and Lila who thinks she is at her zenith. These two intersect at the Cornwall Inn in Newport, Rhode Island, along with other realistic and interesting characters, and the results are intriguing. This isn't a cutesy wedding story, but rather one about people trying their best, sometimes falling on their faces, and trying again. There is just the right amount of well-placed humor and great dialogue in the author's well-paced plot. I requested the book from NetGalley because I liked the cover and even Espach's acknowledgments were a pleasure to read. See what I mean about The Wedding People being the perfect book? I was not familiar with the author before reading this novel but I was glad to see that she has written others, and I've already started Notes on Your Sudden DisappearanceThe Wedding People will be published on July 30, 2024.

What are you making and reading this week?

16 comments:

  1. That great, delightfully speckled Hitchhiker looks so cozy! (Perfect for a damp, windy day!) It makes me want to find a skein of artfully speckled yarn and cast on! :)

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  2. these dreary days does make me knit more and for that I am thrilled to bits. Love your knitting :)

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  3. It's a very difficult time of year to photograph knitting (I think the sun often goes on vacation in January), but your Hitchhiker progress photo does look very cozy, especially considering what's going on outside!

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  4. I think that Funfetti yarn is the perfect foil for gloomy winter weather! How can it not cheer you, y'know? (And dreaming of a Funfetti cake in the future is not bad, either!) I think I could use a book like The Wedding People right about now . . .

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  5. Your Hitchhiker is growing and looking lovely Bonny. Funfetti FTW! "The Wedding Pepople" sounds like it could be fun (but I think I will skip the mental illness book!).

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  6. That HH just makes me smile, Bonny. And you have introduced me to another "new to me" author. Will be looking for books from Alison Espach. Thanks!

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  7. I just finished knitting two baby hats for a set of twins and I just started reading The Berry Pickers. Your Hitchhiker is looking good and reminds me of the birthday cakes my mother made for me when I was young!

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    1. Baby hats are adorable! I love the cover of The Berry Pickers but haven't read it, so I'll be interested in what you think of it.

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  8. I'm making blanket squares right now. Reading The Comfort of Crows by Margaret Renkl and Not So Fancy by Reba McEntire.

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  9. The Funfetti yarn is just so .....fun. It does make me want a cupcake though. I'm listening to Homecoming by Kate Morton and I'm not sure why. Halfway through I remembered the author always has a hard time getting to the point.

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    1. I want a cupcake also, but that may just be my default setting. I've started several Kate Morton books but don't think I've ever finished one. She does go on!

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  10. Oooh, I think The Wedding People is going on my list! Sounds like it'd be a good summer read for me.
    We're having sideways snow here this morning, which will give way to rain eventually. I think your candle DEFINITELY cozies up that picture, and I hope you stay warm and content there today!
    Thinking about the Kissinger book...and not knowing it all...I kind of get the feeling that she is in a 'generational' processing of her family's mental health. If that makes sense. The idea being that she's addressing it, to her capacity, in her time, and hopefully the next generation of her family will do even better. Adding tools to the toolbox, so to speak? Though I can see where it would leave a reader 'wanting.'
    My husband read a book about a Colorado Springs family of 12 kids, 6 of whom had schizophrenia. The kids were all born between '45--'65, so fairly similar timeframe. Thinking it might be an interesting comparison... https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/50088631

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    1. The Wedding People was great - fun, full of humor, yet poignant and hopeful. I just finished Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance and it was just average for me. I have Hidden Valley Road on my list and I can see how important it might be to process growing up in a family with mental health issues but never talking about it. I grew up in that same time frame and while mental health wasn't an issue we never talked about things in my family. I'm glad to have my sister around to compare notes. Some of our memories are much the same but I'm always amazed at how differently we remember some things!

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  11. We have that same gloomy weather here but I don't have confetti yarn to brighten things up! Thanks for the review of The Wedding People, that sounds good.

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  12. We had that weather Monday night through yesterday afternoon ... it was great for knitting, reading, and sleeping! (and not much else) Stay Warm!

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  13. Goodness, the weather is providing drama in many places in this country. I do hope you have many funfetti dreams while knitting the Hitchhiker. This yarn is so sweet with maybe a touch of Valentine's Day in it. I have not heard of the author of The Wedding People but it sounds like something I might enjoy. Thank you for helping host the Read With Us discussion. I enjoyed the conversation.

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