Tuesday, January 8, 2008

my new favorite thing

I love the website Ravelry. I finally got my invite yesterday after probably 2-3 weeks on the waiting list. It's so fantastic, it makes me wonder why I didn't think of it first! My favorite parts are how you can post the projects you are working on, including the yarn you used and hook/needle size. The pattern and yarn fields are searchable, so I can search for a pattern I am interested in and find others who have already completed the project with a different yarn or color. This morning I just searched by yarn and found all the projects I hadn't considered when starting my latest project using Red Heart Baby Clouds. This is a dream come true for knitters and crocheters! I encourage everyone to sign up for it, and if you are already a member, my username is kewillia.

K

Monday, January 7, 2008

The Rest of Her Life

After finishing My Sister's Keeper, I could hardly return to my typical breezy chick lit novels, so I searched for something a bit more serious. I read The Rest of Her Life by Laura Moriarty. Since nothing could ever compare to My Sister's Keeper, this book was a disappointment, but when viewed independently, it was an okay book. This novel follows the story of what happens to a family when the daughter accidentially kills another student while driving. The daughter is obviously scarred and irrevocably changed, but the novel spends too much time on the mom and what she is thinking and flashbacks to her damaging childhood. It was just too depressing, too devoid of hope and optimism. I didn't really enjoy it, and wasted time finishing it.

K

My Sister's Keeper

In recent history, never have I read a book so fast. This amazing novel by Jodi Picoult, which put her on the literary map (for most people), follows the story of a thirteen year old girl named Anna whose reason for being born was to provide her older sister Kate with the cells, marrow and organs to keep her sister alive and hopefully cured of a rare form of leukemia. Instead of continuing to be a constant donor for her sister, Anna decides to take a stand and sue her parents for medical emancipation so she can make decisions for her own body, even if they are the same decisions her parents would have chosen. I loved the characterization of the sisters' relationship, even when it means for one to live, the other has to suffer and perhaps even die.

I hate to be so banal and say the writing was wonderful, but there just aren't any better words for it. It was wonderful, incredible, unbelievable. It was certainly the best book I have read all year. The ending was tremendous, and left me a river of tears even after I finished reading. Picoult's writing left me wanting more, and I'm sad I finished it so quickly. I have read reviews of Picoult's other works, and as is her habit, she illuminates tough ethical questions. While reading this book, I couldn't figure out what I would do in this situation. As a parent, you would do anything to save your children, but I guess there are even limits on that. I can't blame Anna and Kate's parents for simply trying to keep their family together the only way they knew how.

A thought-challenging, stimulating read that kept me turning the pages.

K