books:
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The Knitting Circle: A Novel
Ann Hood
W. W. Norton
, 2007 - 384 pages
average customer review:
based on 50 reviews
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highly recommended
Not just for the knitting crowd
My book club chose this
novel
to discuss and I was not sure how excited I was because of the cover. Now, I am so happy that we read this piece. The
knitting
circle
is about a group of women take up this hobby when they have found themselves adrift in life. The story unfolds each person's personal stories. Knitting together helped them create something tangible while they reconnected with themselves or faced their demons. Nice, fairly quick story which was never boring. Laughed out loud a few times, and also shed some tears as I thoroughly enjoyed the book. I will look for more from this author and am sending it to my Mom and sister because it is so good.
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The Knitting Circle
Excellent! A sad, but beautifully written story. I loved the way Ann Hood involved all the different characters.
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Beautifully written
I was drawn to this book title because I am an avid knitter. I generally stay away from any subject matter where a child has died or been hurt. I cried several times while reading this book, but came away from it feeling admiration for Mary (& the author) for surviving such a terrible loss & finding the strength to continue on. I thought the other characters in the story were also well written, each with there own story of sadness that they were trying to move forward from. I've often thought that
knitting
is my yoga & don't doubt that the author found some restorative energy from doing it as she grieved.
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On Loss and Redemption
This book appealed to my sense of wanting something personal to curl up with. Hood did not disappoint with her semi-autobiographical
novel
of loss, friendship, and redemption in The
Knitting
Circle
.
Mary Baxter and her husband, Dylan, are struggling to stay together after the loss of their 5-year-old daughter to meningitis. Everything around them stands as a reminder of what their life was once like. Mary has no interest in getting out of bed most of the time, much less focus on her job as a community and restaurant reviewer for her local paper. She also feels as if Dylan has moved on, and she is left behind. Their dynamics are strong, and the reader roots for something good and powerful to heal the two of them and their relationship.
Mary's mother urges her to join a knitting circle, which she does, at first reluctantly, but eventually discovers that knitting soothes her mind and its frantic thoughts and memories.
Each of the people in the knitting circle are there with his/her own story of loss, and the chapters alternate with Mary's story and then each of the knitters.
Reading about each character's misfortune is a way to put our own stories into perspective. The characters are strong and realistic, and the backdrop of knitting helps to keep the story moving along.
I would recommend this book to anyone who can appreciate a good writer with a story to tell.
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A heartwarming book
This is a heartwarming book of grief, loss and recovery. A
circle
of women unite through the common bond of grieving over significant losses in their lives. A mother and daughter finally bond after years of estrangement.
The
knitting descriptions
are very realistic. As someone who belongs to a knitting circle I found the circle itself and how the women related to one another to be very true to life.
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In the spirit of How to Make an American Quilt and The Joy Luck Club, a
novel about
friendship and redemption.
After the sudden loss of her only child, Stella, Mary Baxter joins a
knitting
circle
in Providence, Rhode Island, as a way to fill the empty hours and lonely days, not knowing that it will change her life. Alice, Scarlet, Lulu, Beth, Harriet, and Ellen welcome Mary into their circle despite her reluctance to open her heart to them. Each woman teaches Mary a new knitting technique, and, as they do, they reveal to her their own personal stories of loss, love, and hope. Eventually, through the hours they spend knitting and talking together, Mary is finally able to tell her own story of grief, and in so doing reclaims her love for her husband, faces the hard truths about her relationship with her mother, and finds the spark of life again. By an "engrossing storyteller," this new novel once again "works its magic" (Sue Monk Kidd).
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