You'd think after having a long weekend I'd be ready to take on the new week, but it's been dragging. I feel like it should already be Thursday -- maybe the fact that we've turned on summer and it's been hot has something to do with it? Or some of the smoke from the Canadian wildfires? In any case, it is only Wednesday, but also, yay, it's Wednesday! Time to join in with Kat and the Unravelers.
I managed to find a few minutes on Monday to block my linen/silk swatch, and it took almost no time at all to dry. And wonder of wonder, miracle of miracles, my gauge is spot on!
I wish I could convey the drape of this fabric through the screen -- it's simply divine! Now I need to find some time when I'm fully caffeinated and not keeping an eye on the puppy to read through the pattern, highlight the numbers for my size, and cast on.
It's been another excellent week of reading, with three finishes.
I had started Mercury, a hardcover my mother passed along to me, back at the end of April. It didn't grab me right away (maybe the timing was off?), and in the meantime I was reading other things, but it was sitting on the coffee table in the family room where I spend my days with Ruthie, and eventually I got tired of seeing it there and picked it back up again. This is a story of a complicated family in a small (fictional) town outside of Pittsburgh. In the early '90s, high schooler Marley moves to town with her mother and gets swept up into the Joseph family, parents and their three sons who run a roofing company and whose personalities are so big they frequently clash with each other. Initially attracted to the oldest son, Marley soon finds herself pregnant and married to his just-younger brother and thrust into the middle of the family drama. When a roofing job leads to a shocking discovery years later, one in which all members are the family are implicated, everyone is forced to take a hard look at their relationships with one another. I found the story line and characters to be interesting, but I had a hard time figuring out how I felt about the book. On the one hand, I thought the author was telling me too much, but I simultaneously felt that there were times that there was something important I was supposed to intuit but just wasn't getting it. I'd say it was a decent read. I gave it 3 stars."'You know how you can remember exactly when and where you read certain books? A great novel, a truly great one, not only captures a particular fictional experience, it alters and intensifies the way you experience your own life while reading it. And it preserves it, like a time capsule.'"
Lily King's Heart the Lover was one of those rare books for me in that, while I was reading it, it seemed that the rest of the world fell away and I was so much in the moment that I'm sure I will be able to recall the specific day when I read it (and yes, I did read it in a day -- I started it just before bed on Sunday evening and finished it before bed on Monday). There are three main players in this book: the narrator and two men she meets in a creative writing class in college, Sam and Yash. They call her Jordan, after the character in The Great Gatsby. She begins dating Sam, but that relationship doesn't last the year, and when she decides to delay her graduation to pursue a thesis, she can't deny her growing attraction to Yash or his attraction to her. But there are romantic relationships and there are friendships, and when the two collide, things become even more complicated. Years later, all three have moved on and the narrator has achieved success as a published writer when Yash comes back into her life. And when tragic news brings all three back together, they are all forced to confront how they handled things decades ago. This is one of those books where not that much happens but the beauty is in the characters and how they interact with one another. The author does such a stunning job of looking at love, friendship, forgiveness, and personal growth. I'll admit I cried at the end. I gave it 5 stars. Thank you to NetGalley and Grove Press for providing me with an ARC of this book in return for an honest review. This book will be published October 7, 2025.
I'll end this with an obligatory puppy photo -- because I've heard several of you like them! Ruthie has been going to bed on her own the past couple of nights, which means I'm getting a little more time in the evening to myself. Yay!
Hurrah for getting gauge! That is a spectacular feat! And Ruthie is just so adorable. I am so glad she is settling in so beautifully with you all!
ReplyDeleteHaving your gauge be spot on is worth a celebration! Mercury sounds like it might be interesting when I'm in the mood for a soap opera type book. I'm glad you enjoyed The Homemade God; I thought the ending was especially interesting. I agree with your thoughts on Heart the Lover. I'm wondering if you read Writers & Lovers? (But I'm too lazy to check goodreads!)
ReplyDeleteAlso, keep posting those Ruthie pictures! She's so sweet!
DeleteI wish I could pet Ruthie through the computer screen. Such a sweet pup! Yay for getting gauge. I have knit (what? I can't remember) with yarn that was a linen/silk blend and it was so pleasing to knit with and touch. I will probably skip Mercury, but with you and Bonny both recommending the other two they will go on my list. (I'm now in the queue for Homemade God)
ReplyDeleteI love, Loved, LOVED Heart the Lover. It was so, so good - and I cried, too. (Did you read Writers & Lovers?) I love your swatch -- and can imagine the drape that yarn must have. It'll be a perfect summer knit!
ReplyDeleteRuthie is adorable!!! That sweet little face.
ReplyDeleteYay for gauge! Dogs putting themselves to bed is so cute, Mystic was so stubborn about his bedtime, lol.
ReplyDeleteLove your 5-stars for the upcoming Lily King. I just finished The Correspondent - the last ARC you both gave 5 stars to - and have high expectations for this one, too! Congratulations to Molly for the stellar finish ... physics?! wasn't quite the A+ subject I was expecting, and good for her! Hope this week finds y'all settling into a summer routine (in spite of the weather).
ReplyDelete