Thanks to those of you who weighed in on the smaller shawls I was considering for the Tour de France Knitalong. Fully Charged and Winterberry both got multiple votes.
I thought I’d share a few more shawls, but this time they’re larger pieces, calling for three or more skeins of yarn. Usually, this makes them more wearable, but also it means they’ll take longer to knit, and the odds of finishing in three weeks the Tour lasts diminishes significantly.
I’ve been looking at Pressed Flowers since before last year’s Tour, and the fact that I’m still considering it bodes well. It’s a heavier yarn and requires 3-4 skeins.
Nightshift is another pattern I’ve looked at over and over again. Again, a heavier weight shawl.
At the last minute, we were given today off from work to celebrate Juneteenth. It was a lovely surprise.
I used the afternoon to pick blueberries and spent a little time this evening reading So You Want to Talk about Race by Ijeoma Oluo.
Tomorrow, I’m planning a trip to the library, garden, and pool. I have beans to plant and holds to pick up and am looking forward to spending some time swimming, since the heat and humidity are due to return. If Rudi’s up to a movie after his long bike ride (he’s leaving at 6 a.m.), I have a dvd or two we can pick from. If not, I have my book to read.
Sunday, I’ll hit the farmer’s market for some apricots, plums, and raspberries and possibly the season’s first corn. Dad and I will spend some time on the phone, and I’m hopeful the Mets will give us some good plays to discuss between now and then. I might also make some pancakes, since blueberry season is really the only time of the year, I enjoy eating them.
How are you hoping to spend this weekend?
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I’m feeling very meh about the book I started in print last week. There are some pretty major stressors in my life right now, so I can’t tell if it’s just that, if I need to give myself another 25 pages to let the story get going, or if, despite several other people telling me it’s good, it’s just not the right book for me.
And with all those other stressors, it feels very irksome to have the thing I like best as a stress reliever to be demanding additional brain power and attention.
Just be easy, reading, at least for the rest of this month!
I haven’t been especially good about reading this year, which is due in large part to working too much and being depressed and then working some more. But summer is a time of lounging by the pool and soaking up rays at the beach and staying out late at the park. I bet if I made dates with some of my friends to just go read at a cafe, they’d be down for that. So I will do that.
To help with that plan come That Artsy Reader Girl and this week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic, a perennial seasonal favorite — the top ten books I plan to read this summer:
Incense and Sensibility by Sonali Dev — The latest in one of my favorite series — retellings of Jane Austen’s novels — drops the first week in July.
Beth & Amy by Virginia Kantra — The sequel to Meg & Jo, a modern reimagining of the four March sisters as 20-somethings who grew up on a farm in the Carolinas.
Pride & Premeditation by Tirzah Price — Yup, another Austen spin, but this time with a murder subplot.
The Road Trip by Beth O’Leary — I loved The Flatshare and road trips just scream summertime.
A Lady’s Formula for Love by Elizabeth Everett — A Victorian romance, but set between a fiercely independent scientist who heads a women’s intellectual circle and the bodyguard assigned to protect her. I’m hoping for a readalike to the Veronica Speedwell series.
Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo — A heist novel, this is part of the Grishaverse and features some of the characters from the recent Shadows and Bone series on Netflix. I’d started it on audio months ago and then decided it would work better on paper and have been waiting for it on the holds list ever since.
The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World by Laura Imai Messina — Based on a true story, this novel tells about a telephone booth in a Japanese garden — and the unique purpose strangers put it to.
The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray — Historical fiction aboutBelle de Costa Greene, J.P. Morgan’s personal librarian and a Black woman passing as white.
You’ll Never Believe What Happened to Lacey: Crazy Stories about Racism by Amber Ruffin and Lacey Lamar — Real-life anecdotes from about Living While Black from Amber Ruffin and her sister.