Regardless, I am sneaking in some crafting...
THE CRAFTS: I have been crocheting the same blankets...still...alongside cross-stitching. I've also been working on that same infernal cardigan. Can someone more experienced than I please explain to me why sweater sleeves are the black hole of knitting, the realm in which you can knit for hours and seemingly make absolutely no progress? I just don't understand it. The rounds are, what, 40-55 stitches around and regularly decreasing? Logic would state they should work up quickly! Yet, here I am three months later with not a single completed sleeve.
Anywho, I'll have more pictures of that thing on Wednesday as I have given myself a deadline. I want to wear my cardigan to travel to NYACCE a week from today, so hopefully that gets my knitting butt in gear.
In the meantime, I picked up a "for the heck of it" knitting project to entertain myself this summer. Those who see me on a regular basis know I'm a bit of a rabid Phillies fan, having been born and raised partially in south-eastern Pennsylvania. Those who know anything about baseball know that the Philles are an incredibly lack-luster team as of late (...and historically...). To make this 2015 baseball season a bit more fun, I'm knitting a Crackerjack scarf in Phillies colors.
Pattern (as of April 19th) |
My progress, 9 games in. |
Yes, this is how I'm making myself feel better about our 4-9 record...
Just let me have my delusion...
THE BOOK: I was working on MaddAddam by Margaret Atwood before Christmas, but I've not picked it up since then. I just completely lost interest, for some reason. Part of the problem was the audio book I downloaded on my Kindle from the local library was incredibly quiet. Even cranking it and my car's stereo up to full blast, it was darn near impossible to hear Zeb's voice actor over even something as simple as a fan. Perhaps sometime down the road, I'll listen to the rest of it via earphones. Right now, it doesn't fit my schedule.
In the meantime, I'm listening to Brothers by Da Chen on my commutes and...I really don't know what I think of it just yet. It's an...interesting...book. Parts of it I love, but others just drive me batty. I do agree with some of the critiques: it feels like the author just took in every historical fiction trope he could imagine. In other places, the world he illustrates in his novel is fantastically real and inviting, as well as horrifying. I keep flip-flopping about my feelings on it. Considering I got this book-on-CD for $1 at my local library's book sale, I can't complain too much!
I also blasted out Call the Midwife a few weeks ago, after marathoning the entire collection of episodes on Netflix in the course of a week. That book, I adored. I'm fascinated by the medical field--though too squeamish to have ever seriously considered a profession in that field--and love first-hand accounts of life in historical eras, so this book truly sparked my fancy.
In the meantime, I'm listening to Brothers by Da Chen on my commutes and...I really don't know what I think of it just yet. It's an...interesting...book. Parts of it I love, but others just drive me batty. I do agree with some of the critiques: it feels like the author just took in every historical fiction trope he could imagine. In other places, the world he illustrates in his novel is fantastically real and inviting, as well as horrifying. I keep flip-flopping about my feelings on it. Considering I got this book-on-CD for $1 at my local library's book sale, I can't complain too much!
I also blasted out Call the Midwife a few weeks ago, after marathoning the entire collection of episodes on Netflix in the course of a week. That book, I adored. I'm fascinated by the medical field--though too squeamish to have ever seriously considered a profession in that field--and love first-hand accounts of life in historical eras, so this book truly sparked my fancy.