Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Unraveled Wednesday: 12/17/25

I’m happily joining Kat and the Unravelers today, with completed slippers, Hitchhikers in progress, and a barely begun hat. I realized that I hadn't knit John a hat this year and since it's a Christmas tradition, I looked around for a pattern, ordered yarn, and then worked on the gray Hitchhiker while I waited (impatiently) for the yarn to arrive.

Deciding on a hat pattern was slightly difficult because John always wears the one I knit four years ago, Bankhead. I finally asked him what he liked about it and he said it was warm but not too tight. I chose the Bulky Waffle Hat for this year because I enjoyed knitting Justin's slippers with Malabrigo Chunky and wanted to continue the enjoyable experience. Once the yarn arrived yesterday, I was a little dismayed to find that I didn't have the recommended size 10 needles. I decided to use Justin's slippers as a swatch, and ended up using size 8 needles and casting on four extra stitches. Right now it's just ribbing but it will hopefully go quickly. If it doesn't work, I can always frog it after Christmas and make adjustments (or maybe it will fit me). I also ordered more of the Malabrigo for mittens for me, but they will have to wait.  

And since they're officially an FO and will soon be wrapped, here are Justin's slippers. I do hope he wears them sometimes, or maybe his cats will sleep on them since they are so soft and warm. 
 
 
I only finished one book this week. I'm sorry it is an ARC and won't be published until June, but it was so good I'm going to share my thoughts here in December. Ann Patchett has always had a gift for writing about the quiet, powerful moments that shape us, but Whistler feels like something even more tender and resonant, a novel that hums with memory, regret, and the kind of love that never fully lets go. From the very first pages, I was completely absorbed.

The story begins with a chance encounter at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Daphne Fuller and her husband notice an older man trailing behind them. It turns out to be Eddie Triplett, Daphne’s former stepfather from decades earlier. What unfolds from that moment is a luminous, deeply human exploration of time, connection, and the strange ways our past selves remain alive inside us. Patchett writes their reunion with such grace that it feels both miraculous and inevitable.

This is a novel about the choices we make and the ones made for us, about how small events can redirect entire lives, and how love, unexpected, unconventional, or fleeting, can echo for years. Patchett captures the fragility of memory and the incredible feeling of simply being known by someone else. The book is understated but emotionally expansive, filled with those sharp little truths the author inserts so delicately you don’t realize how deeply they’ve settled until you feel the tug in your chest. 

Whistler will absolutely be one of my top books of 2025. In fact, finishing it has left me with the distinct (and slightly comical) worry that there may not be much to look forward to (book-wise) in 2026 because I may have already read the best book that will be published during that year. It’s that moving, that beautifully crafted, and that unforgettable. A quiet masterpiece that I will re-read several times before publication on June 2, 2026.

Thank you to Edelweiss and Harper for providing me with a copy of this stellar book.

What are you making and reading this week? 

 

5 comments:

  1. I love that HH, Bonny! It is very elegant looking. If you don't mind, please tell me what yarns you are using to make it. And the slippers are so enticing since they are a fabulous color and look so soft and warm. I completely understand John's hat desires. I have never owned a hat that was simultaneously warm and comfortable, not to mention cute. I am really looking forward to reading Whistler. You have written yet another enticing and masterly review.

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  2. I think you are smart to knit a bulky hat -- you'll be done in no time! I'm also so happy to hear that Whistler was that good (not that I'm surprised). I haven't heard anything about my request on NetGalley, but if I have to wait for it to be published, so be it. I can always preorder a signed copy from Parnassus Books!

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  3. Thanks for reminding me of the Bankshead hat. I may have time to whip one up for next week's gift giving. Thanks for the Ann Patchett review, it's nice to have that to look forward to. Speaking of looking forward, Barbara Kingsolver's IG feed indicates that she has shipped a new book off to her publishers....so there's that to anticipate in '26. And Tana French has a new Cal Hooper mystery coming out in March.
    Happy Holidays!

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    1. I'm not sure who this "Anonymous" is but thank you for the good book news to look forward to in 2026. I was just thinking about rereading some of Kingsolver's earliest books and it will be nice to have something new from her. Bankhead is a quick knit and makes a really nice hat. I knit four of them and have wondered if I could knit one in a bulky yarn.

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  4. That Hitchhiker is just so lovely Bonny. (I really like grey a lot.). I'm not doing any Christmas knitting (obviously), but my plan is to forge ahead in the new year and make some gifts for 2026. It would be nice to be ahead of the game for a change. LOL. Whistler sounds fabulous! Thanks for your review.

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