Pages

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Unraveled, Week 4/2026

Still here, still snowed in! I finally got out my yardstick yesterday afternoon to see if I could get a more accurate idea of how much snow we've gotten, and this is what it told me:

I have to say that it seemed like a lot more than that Monday morning when I went out to shovel! We've having some really bad luck with snow plows in the city, and even if we had all trucks active and they were all out on the streets, they wouldn't get to our dead end if at all for days. [Update: A plow came through a little after midnight! Incredible!] So I figured I should try to dig out some of the street so that we can get out of our driveway. An hour and a half later, here's what I'd gotten done:

The sidewalk only needed touching up after all the shoveling on Sunday.

I'm sure you won't be surprised that my arms and back were very sore yesterday! We've had a bit more snow since then, too, but luckily not enough that we've needed to go out and clear it. The bigger issue was the extreme cold, which kept all of us at home for another day. Today, though, the Mister has to go into the office, and Molly has a two-hour delay, which means I will need to drive her in for a 10 a.m. start. I'm hoping the roads are too horrible by then.

But enough about the storm! I know many of you are dealing with it as well, so you know my pain. It's Wednesday, which means it's time to join Kat and the Unravelers. I've been continuing to knit on my cowl, but it's not going to look much different until it's done and seamed, so I didn't bother to take a photo. Instead, I have an exciting finish -- I completed a skein of handspun!


I started spinning this non-superwash Shaniko wool from Cesium Yarn back in September(!) after buying it at SSK last year. I bought it partly because I wanted to try to the wool but mainly because the colorway was Neighborhood of Make Believe -- I felt like I had to, because reasons. I didn't do anything fancy with this spin, just spun the fiber from end to end, wound the singles into a center-pull ball, and plied it on itself so I used up every last bit.


The fiber was mostly white, so I'm not surprised that the finished yarn is so soft and pastel-y. It ended up fingering to sport weight, and it shrunk up a lot; I was expecting 400+ yards based upon the number of wraps when I skeined it up, but after washing and drying, it measured about 384 yards.

Reading has been good the past week, even if I had to sacrifice some reading time to shoveling. I finished three books.

The Small and the Mighty is a chronicle of U.S. history that looks at the lives of unknown or lesser-known Americans who played a critical role in the story of this country. I'd had this book on my Kindle shelf for several months, but given what has been happening lately, I wanted to be inspired by people who worked to make this country better, and it delivered. I was happy that I did recognize some of the names, but I got a more complete picture of even those. I will note that this book has a more conversational tone than a true textbook, but I think that makes it more approachable. Learning what I did, I could even overlook the handful of grammatical errors I came across (I figured the content was more important than the form). If you, too, are looking for reasons not to be ashamed to be an American, I'd recommend it. I gave it 4 stars.

I'd seen Best Offer Wins show up in a couple of places, so I put it on hold at the library on a whim. If I had to describe it, I'd say it's a thriller about a woman desperate to buy the perfect house in the D.C. suburbs. Yes, I said thriller. This book is, well, bonkers. I've heard about how competitive some housing markets are, and certainly when we were looking for a house, it was a stressful process, but this takes it to another level. I couldn't believe what the main character was willing to do to get her dream home, and then she went way beyond that -- and then beyond that! As a thriller, it definitely delivers, but a lot of the book made me feel icky (though I suspect that was kind of the point). I gave it 3 stars; I think it's well written, but I can't say I really liked it all that much.


My final finish was a book that my aunt gave me when I saw her in Florida in December. Florence Adler Swims Forever follows a Jewish family in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in the mid-1930s. College student Florence loves nothing as much as she loves swimming and is training to swim the English Channel. Her married older sister, Fannie, is pregnant and on bed rest in the hospital after losing a baby following an early labor. When Florence drowns in an accident (not a spoiler -- it happens in the first chapter), their parents decide to hide the tragedy from Fannie, worried that the shock could lead her to lose another child. This decision impacts not just them but also Fannie's husband, Isaac, and young daughter, Gussie, as well as Anna, a friend of the family who has managed to get out of Germany on a student visa, and Stuart, Florence's friend and coach. This is a story of a family dealing with its grief but also dealing with the threat of Nazi Germany. It's not easy to tell a story from so many different points of view, but it's well done here, and I appreciated it all the more when I read the author's note and learned that the story came from her own family members. I gave it 4 stars.

I'm currently reading books in two series -- Emma Lion Vol. 8 and On the Calculation of Volume III -- and have finally started my buddy read of Anna Karenina with Katie. I expect that one will take me quite a while!

What are you making and reading this week?

Monday, January 26, 2026

How I Spent My Weekend

I took my knitting to see a show:

I did some plying:

I baked some bread:

I made some soup:

I did some reading and knitting while getting in some puppy snuggles:

And I watched the snow piling up and covering the composter and fake owl:

I also braved Trader Joe's first thing on Saturday (they were out of full-sized carrots?), did several loads of laundry, shoveled snow, took Ruthie out to frolic, and tried to get some extra sleep.

I hope if you were in the path of this storm, you are warm and safe at home!

Friday, January 23, 2026

Too Much Drama

Friends, I am always happy to see Friday come around again, but this week, I am extra relieved because we have had A Week. Not long after my post went up on Wednesday, we got a text from my mother that my aunt (her sister) had been rushed to the ER the previous night with a brain bleed. Oh, and she'd also tested positive for COVID and both my parents had as well. She was scheduled for surgery that afternoon. To say that I was anxious that day until we'd heard from the Chicago family would be a massive understatement. I will spare all of you the worry and let you know that the surgery was successful, that she's expected to make a full recovery, and that my cousin reported yesterday afternoon that she was cracking jokes and correctly answering questions on legal terminology. Phew! Also, it appears that no one who left Chicago on Sunday, as we did, got infected. My mother says she feels like she has a bad cold and my father is asymptomatic, but I feel bad that after avoiding it for almost six years, they finally caught the 'vid. I'm just relieved that they're not too ill.

After all that drama, we woke up yesterday to ice everywhere because it warmed up enough yesterday for some light snow to turn to rain, which then of course coated everything. Molly had a two-hour delay, so I drove to her school, and then I proceeded to slip and slide everywhere trying to walk the dog and exercise.

And if that's not enough, have you heard there's a huge winter storm moving through a good portion of the country this week? The last forecast I heard for our area is 8-12 inches of snow, mostly falling Saturday night and Sunday. I'm glad this is hitting on the weekend and we can be home, but it's going to be a mess, and our city has already been struggling with clearing the roads. It's very possible we'll all be home again on Monday.

As far as knitting goes, I have been doing it a little (not as much as I'd like) but don't have much to show for it. I did cast on my sweater, but all I've gotten done is about an inch and a half of ribbing. And I cast on for a tube cowl -- a long tube that I'll graft together -- in one of the new skeins of Fibernymph Dye Works fingering. The only photo I've taken in the past couple of days is the finished but not yet blocked charity hat:

Though we'll be hunkering down for the storm, we're planning to get out and about on Saturday. I'm going to send the Mister to do our grocery shopping after he takes Molly to take her learner's permit test(!). In the afternoon, the girls will be headed to see Wicked, which we were supposed to go see with my mother and which she'll obviously have to miss. My sister-in-law is coming, and one of Molly's friends will use my mother's ticket. We're also supposed to get together with the Mister's side of the family on Sunday evening for a birthday dinner for my father-in-law, but we'll have to see if any of us can actually get out. Honestly, I kind of hope we're snowed in for a day or two -- I'd really like a quiet day at home!

Stay safe and warm this weekend, friends, especially if you're in the path of this storm.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Unraveled, Week 3/2026

It's already Wednesday -- a nice benefit of a long weekend! It's my favorite blogging day of the week because it means I get to link up with Kat and the Unravelers.

Molly had a remote learning day yesterday, thanks to frigid temperatures, so I had her home with me and didn't have to do school pickup, which meant longer snoozy time with Ruthie. Thanks to that extra time, I got in a little more knitting and finished up another triple-stranded scrappy hat:

Yes, technically it was still on the needles, but when you have a dog sleeping next to you and want them to continue to sleep, you put off finishing the crown of a hat until later. This was a hat I pretty much made up as I went along, and I rather like how it turned out. I did take some notes as I worked so I can reknit it in one yarn -- in fact, I have some fuzzy bright pink yarn that would be perfect for it. But first I'll weave in my ends, weigh my remaining yarn, and give this one a block.

With all the travel in the past week, I haven't gotten a ton of reading done, but I did manage to finish three books.

The River Has Roots is a novella that is a sort of fairy tale about two sisters and the unbreakable bond of their love for one another. There is some magic in the river and in grammar, there is a love story, and there is a villain. I listened to the audiobook over the course of last Thursday, and while I really enjoyed the addition of sound effects and song in the background of the reading, I think this is a book I would very much like to reread with my eyes so I can both take my time and flip back and forth. Admittedly, I don't comprehend what I read with my ears as well as what I read with my eyes, so perhaps it wasn't the best choice. But it's well done and a great little piece of semi-escapist fantasy. I gave it 4 stars.

The Devil's Grip is the final work a small group of us are reading for our year or so of focusing on women in translation. It follows a woman who has traveled to Italy and taken up with a man she describes as ugly but whose transformation leads him to be attractive to other women. He cheats on her, and when she confronts him, he beats her. So she begins an affair of her own, with an American man who convinces her to come back to New Orleans with him. She finally gets up the courage to leave her boyfriend and fly to the United States, only to encounter a potentially even more dangerous situation. I won't bury the lede: I didn't like this book. I didn't understand what the woman saw in her boyfriend in the first place, I didn't like that she put up with his abuse, and I just didn't like her as a character. I would have DNF'd it if we weren't going to be discussing it. I gave it 2 stars, mainly because I could appreciate the writing even if I didn't care for the story.


My last finish for the week was, thankfully, a little lighter. The True True Story of Raja the Gullible, which won the 2025 National Book Award for Fiction, is told by the titular character, a 60-something gay high school philosophy teacher who lives in Beirut with his mother. In flashbacks, we learn about some of his formative childhood experiences and how they influenced his life's course. Throughout it all there is the constant of his relationship with his mother, arguably the most important relationship in his life, both as a child and as an adult. It's funny, it's sad, and it's heartwarming. I really enjoyed it and gave it 4 stars.



I'm currently reading The Small and the Mighty on Kindle and Florence Adler Swims Forever on paper, the latter of which I was handed down by my aunt when we were in Florida.

What are you making and reading this week?

Monday, January 19, 2026

Readjusting

I do enjoy a long weekend, but it also makes it hard to keep track of what day it is, particularly when you throw travel into the mix. We had a really nice weekend with the extended family, even if it was really cold and I am now feeling like a total slug because I haven't exercised for three days. We are all off today for MLK Jr. day, and I'm hoping to get more or less back to my usual routine before we're all back to work and school tomorrow.

As predicted, I did minimal knitting while we were away. Most of the knitting was done on the airplane, in fact. It's been a while since I knit a patterned sock, in large part because the need to look at the sock slows me down. I know it'll be worth it in the end, but it does annoy me just a bit because I'm used to speeding through. When I put the sock away as we were landing yesterday, I'd gotten through the heel flap and turn.

We got home a little after 6 last night, so after dinner (we picked up from the CAVA that just opened up near us), unpacking, throwing some laundry in, and taking a shower, the Mister and I sat down to watch last week's episode of The Pitt and I pulled out another triple-stranded fingering weight scrap hat to work on:

Today I'm going to try to go for a run (though it's likely to be a slow one, as it's snowing lightly), finish up the laundry, and make some edits to a pattern that I just got back from my tech editor. Ruthie will be dropped off later this morning and will need a bath. The Mister is going grocery shopping and Molly has homework to finish up. And later I'm going to wind some yarn and get started on my sweater. It'll likely be a quiet, fairly boring day, but that's what I need right now!

Friday, January 16, 2026

Friday Finishes

TGIF, friends! Later this morning we'll be headed to the airport; I'm glad we have a flight at a civilized time today and I can enjoy my coffee and breakfast at home before we need to get on the road. I'm happy to report that I'm feeling almost completely better, though it's hard to tell whether my nose keeps dripping because of the last gasps of the sinus infection or because of the frigid weather that's moved in. Staying home on Wednesday proved to be a good move because it was chilly and rained all day, which means had I gone to the retreat, I likely would have been sitting around in wet clothes all day.

This week has been about finishing things up, at least as far as my knitting is concerned. I did in fact finish the charity hat on Wednesday night, and it used up a whopping 440 yards of leftover yarn!

Pattern: Sagamore Flyover Hat (Ravelry link) by Jennifer Lassonde, size L
Yarn: Fibernymph Dye Works Bounce (superwash merino/nylon) and Bedazzled (superwash merino/nylon/sparkle), held triple
Needles: US 7 (4.5 mm) and US 8 (5 mm)
Started/Completed: January 11/January 14
Mods: changed the crown decreases

I have knit this pattern many times before and likely will again. It's very intuitive and easy to memorize and is a bit more exciting than a plain stockinette beanie. Plus, it works really well with fingering held triple. I used leftovers from a baby sweater and four pairs of socks, purposefully choosing colorways with bright shades. My only modification, which I've done every time I've knit this pattern except for the first, was to work more traditional spiral decreases of 8 stitches every other round. The pattern has you decrease much more quickly, leading to a scrunched-up crown that I don't care for. I had to do a little finagling to keep the stitch pattern consistent, but the thought required was minimal.

I also finally got around to doing the embroidery on my recent design sample. It didn't take very long, but I wanted to do at least some of it during the day when I would have some light to take photos for the pattern, and I didn't manage to find time for that until yesterday after Ruthie got picked up by the dog sitter.

The final thing I finished this week was the second swatch for my sweater. I went up to a US 8/5 mm needle, just to see, and it turns out to have been a wise choice because I perfectly matched stitch gauge and got even closer on row gauge. I'm not going to be starting the sweater until we're back from our trip, but at least now I know I'm ready to wind some more yarn and cast on when we get home.

There's also been a bit of stash enhancement this week. Although I am still very focused on using up the yarn I have, I really only bought yarn once (I think?) last year and decided I deserved a little treat. Plus, I wanted to support my friend Lisa, and she was having a new year's sale -- and offering a free gift with every purchase, too. And then she recorded her first podcast of the year and announced winners for the last quarter of her 2025 make-along, and wouldn't you know I was one of them? So now I have some new pretties:

The free gift was the two mini skeins on the left, along with some attached stitch markers. My purchase was the two skeins in the center, Traveler (sport weight) in Gathering Seashells and Bounce (fingering) in Tracks in the Snow. My prize was the set of Inversibles on Mountain Tweed (fingering). I don't have anything specific planned for these skeins just yet, but I'm sure I'll figure it out.

As for trip knitting, I am only taking the socks I started for my mother when we were in Florida because I haven't touched them since we got back and we're not checking bags, so I don't have much space. My knitting time is likely to be limited, in any case, because we've got a full schedule of activities related to the bat mitzvah and have plans to visit with some friends who moved to Chicago last year. Plus it's going to be cold, maybe too cold to knit!

I hope you can stay warm and cozy this weekend -- have a good one!

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Unraveled, Week 2/2026

It's Wednesday, and as predicted, I've had a little setback with sinus infection (which may or may not have happened after I read through the agenda for the retreat and saw "team-building improv session"). While we have miserable weather today -- rain turning to snow -- I will be staying warm inside with Ruthie, and I'll kick things off by joining Kat and the Unravelers.

As promised, here is the official FO post for the cowl, which has now had all its ends woven in and been given its spa treatment.


Pattern: Static by Kacey Herlihy (Ravelry link) size large
Yarn: Emma's Yarn Simply Spectacular DK (75% superwash merino/25% nylon) in Terrazzo (main color) and Simply Spectacular DK Smalls in After Dark (black), Wish You Were Beer (gold), and Briar Rose (pink)
Needles: US 4 (3.5 mm) and US 5 (3.75 mm)
Started/Completed: January 5/January 11
Mods: none, other than binding off in pattern

This was such a fun knit. I either bought the pattern during a past Down Cellar Studio event or won it as a prize, but it was in my library regardless and I thought it would be a great use of the cowl set I picked up from the SSK giveaway table last summer, a full skein of DK plus three DK minis. Because of the three colors, it made perfect sense to do the large size with three colorwork bands (the smaller option has just two). I ended up with just small amounts of the colors and about 20 g from the full skein, so it was an excellent match of pattern and yarn. And I had such fun with this motif that I will definitely be knitting this cowl again -- though wouldn't that motif look fabulous at the bottom of a sweater? For now, this cowl will go in the charity pile, but I think eventually it'll keep someone very cozy because all that stranding makes for a very squishy fabric.

Speaking of charity knitting, the hat has grown a little during Ruthie's afternoon naps:


I should be able to finish this up by the end of the day (even with needing to make sure I catch all three strands in each stitch, this fabric works up quickly!) and then will need to sort out my next almost-mindless knitting.

It's been another good week of reading, with lots of audio!

I am grouping the three audiobooks I finished this week together because they're all Emma M. Lion -- volumes 5, 6, and 7. These books are such a delight, and they've been such a nice diversion from the heavy news from around the world the past couple of weeks. I have so enjoyed the most recent finishes that I've been reflecting on the previous books I've read and bumped them all up to 5 stars. They have been fabulous on audio, but I am planning to buy myself physical copies so I can have them in my personal library.

My other finish this week was Steven Rowley's forthcoming Take Me with You. Jesse and his husband, Norman, have been together a long time, and like many middle-aged couples, they are finding some aspects of their life together a little disappointing. But it's a shock to Jesse when he wakes up in their Joshua Tree home in the middle of night to bright lights outside and then to see Norman step into that light and disappear. Was it a dream? An alien abduction? Or did Norman simply leave him? Whatever happened, Jesse realizes that Norman is gone and he has to get his life back on track. Meanwhile, Norman's younger sister, Lally, has realized that she's not getting any younger and wants to be a mother, but to do that, she needs the embryos created from her eggs and Jesse's sperm back when Jesse and Norman thought they wanted to be parents, but she needs to find Norman to get him to sign off on releasing the embryos to her. Throw in a private investigator and a conspiracy theorist living next door in an Airstream camper and it seems like one of Steven Rowley's typically outrageous and hilarious books. But that's not what this book is. Yes, it is funny, but it's more touching and thoughtful than laugh-out-loud. This new novel speaks to those moments in life when you're on autopilot, or so you think, and suddenly everything changes, forcing you to correct your course and perhaps even question if it's a course you want to stay on. I gave it 4 stars. Thank you to NetGalley and Putnam for providing me with a digital ARC of this book in return for an honest review. This book will be published May 19, 2026.

I'm taking a little break from Emma for a few days, at least, while I catch up on some podcasts and am currently reading The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother) on Kindle and The Devil's Grip on paper. How about you -- what are you making and reading this week?