The new issue of Taproot magazine arrived yesterday. Love this quote.
And this art work:
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The new issue of Taproot magazine arrived yesterday. Love this quote.
And this art work:
The Canada Reads showdown is starting soon, here is another review, my obvious favorite so far.
It was refreshing to be invited along on a journey through a life instead of being an audience to a lecture on life. Through the authors eyes a gay male in a increasingly strict religious society I was witness to this societal change of ideal and how devastating it can be to a persons identity, permanently scarring the soul. The author who’s facing his own challenges, being gay and finding where he fits in the world is a perfect narrator of this story. A story that needs to be told from a person seen as an outsider of his own culture, he knows how the rest of his adopted Canadian culture sees the conflicts and he expresses this throughout the novel, as he distances himself from his family whose ideologies are changing and are becoming foreign to him. This story can be applied to many cultures and times through history when the young have moved away from home or homeland to set up a new life elsewhere either because of conflict or change of view. If we look into the past of our own country or family, this idea is repeated over and over. We can see it in the aboriginal history in Canada, and the immigrant experience. Thank you Kamal Al-Solaylee.
Here is my latest knit:
Colonnade shawl by Stephen West, knit with CEY Sprout, 100% organic cotton. It was fun to knit with bulky yarn, it was super quick and satisfying. I’m hoping good for Spring.
I started reading the books championed for this years Canada Reads 2015. I finished: And The Birds Rained Down by Jocelyne Saucier and I’m starting The Inconvenient Indian by
Thomas King.
Here are my new projects on the needles right now:
Mittens for me:
I’m so excited to share this movie review! I watched Tracks last evening. Found on Netflix. It’s based on a true life event and book by Robyn Davidson. She journeyed across the desert to the ocean with camels and just herself, it lasted 1700 miles and hundreds of days. It was fantastic, the storyline itself was amazing, the fact it’s true is almost unbelievable. I’ve since downloaded the book to read. Robyn Davidson’s adventures in the Australian Desert was inspiring and says a lot about basic human needs and desires. The story is filled with girl power. I laughed and cried (Well blubbered really). Worth seeing for sure!!
I finished this book last week. I’m now an absolute fan of Rachel Joyce. She gets you on the first page and keeps your attention until the last. Thought provoking and touching this book is about the stories of Byron a young boy and Jim an Obsessive-compulsive middle aged man. Both stories of tragedy and loss. Worth a read.
I finally finished this book, once I got into the story and I wasn’t distracted by other reads I was hooked. The story was a journey like the companion of this book The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry. I wish I had read them closer together because some of the meaning was lost in my memory. The book was about a lady who was in the process of dying and remembering her life. Each chapter a story of past or present as she confessed her truths. Absolving her sins and finding meaning along the way as she waited for Harold Fry. The ending had an interesting twist on reality. Definitely worth a read.
I finished Bittersweet by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore the other night. It was a bit of weird with a dash of happy ending. I really enjoyed it. I was expecting the middle to drag because I couldn’t imagine how the story could evolve it had such a unique storyline. The mystery of it kept me reading.
Next up I have to finish The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy… 79% to go, I’m enjoying it.
Wow, I had a vacation day yesterday so I was able to wander around. I delivered a couple of commissioned pieces, the olive green cowl knit with Cobasi and a lime green basket weave cowl that I whipped up with Illimani Cadena and I can’t wait to knit with it again. It was a surprise!! cowl. I love spreading yarn love. I had a beautiful lunch at The Rolled Oat, it’s amazing what they do with lentils and vegetables. Yum!! I ended up finding a spot next to the Wood Stove at Gaspereau Valley Fibres. The Thursday afternoon knit group is lovely and lively.
I’m reading this book, it caught my eye at my fav booksellers. It’s on beautiful paper. Does anyone else love reading on beautiful paper?
These are striped Cobasi socks I'm knitting from a pattern found on Ravelry. Love Socks.
I finished reading The Empty Room by Lauren Davis last evening. It was a touching story about a women’s struggle with alcoholism. It was well written and real. I felt like I had a look into her brain. It’s a difficult subject to write about. It’s often a joke to some or not taken seriously, like it is a self-control issue. An interesting read.