Oh dear.
I miss you all.
But what with H’s expanded hours and the Fourth Child Who Is Kicking My Butt, I am lucky I have enough brain power to even read, let alone blog about what I’m reading. Bear with me, I will try to do better.
Um, right after Christmas.
I just reread Gil McNeil’s
The Beach Street Knitting Society and Yarn Club in preparation to read its sequel
Needles and Pearls. Not yet out in the US, it was sent to me by a kind friend who sort of accidentally ordered it from a UK bookshop. Equally as charming as the first, the plot takes a couple unexpected turns, but it still qualifies as feel-good reading, and it inspires me to knit more.
I am thoroughly and surprisingly enjoying the weird little novel by Jonathan Miles,
Dear American Airlines. Begun as a letter of complaint to the airline during an unexpected and extended layover in O’Hare Airport, Bennie Ford meanders through his life, his relationships, and his personal epiphanies. It’s an odd conceit for a novel but it works, and Bennie is a complicated but sympathetic man.
I also finished Tom Perrotta’s
The Abstinence Teacher, but since I read it, weirdly concurrently, with Kathryn Joyce’s
Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement, I think I will save my thoughts about that bizarre juxtaposition for another post.
Moving onto Raffaella Barker’s autobiographical
Come and Tell Me Some Lies and Lillian Nattel’s engaging
The River Midnight.
My husband asked for my marked-up copy of the Persephone Press catalogue, so I am anticipating some lovely, dove grey volumes among my Christmas gifts.
And I just requested a buttload of YA novels from the library today, after catching up on
Jess’s blog.
I am going to die before I get to read everything I want to, aren’t I?
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from the Quiverfull website (www.quiverfull.com)