Sunday, March 20, 2011

Knit Two and Knit the Season, both by Kate Jacobs

Kate Jacobs continues to delight in Knit Two and Knit the Season, the last two books of her mini-series. Each lady of the Friday Night Knitting Club has taken a different path since the end of the first book, The Friday Night Knitting Club. But despite the different pathes their lives take them, they continue to grow closer.

Although all of the ladies feel a kinship to one another, bonded together by their experiences in the first book, in the second book, Knit Two, we see how some of them begin to grow deeper in their friendship with one or two other ladies they may not have felt so close with before. The ladies also make new friends along the way, expanding their circle, but still maintaining their core for advice, laughs, and yarn.

In Knit the Season, readers revisit the wisdom and wit of Dakota's great-grandmother. One scene at the end of the book is especially touching with all sentiments completely sponsored by her humor, grace, and thoughtfulness.

All in all, if you loved TFNKC, you will fly through these next two books. I would love for Kate Jacobs to continue writing more to this series so that I can see how Dakota, Catherine, Peri, and the rest of the FNKC crew continue to grow, develop, and change.

Kate Jacobs actually has a website, http://www.katejacobs.com/ and another, non-Knitting Club novel, Comfort Food. I'm on to this one next!

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Shanghai Girls by Lisa See

See is known for her ability to transport
the reader into a different time and place, and out of her three
bestselling books (which include Snow Flower and the Secret Fan and
Peony in Love, both set in old-world China) the concept of "Shanghai
Girls" sounded most appealing. Shanghai is a beautiful city, often
described as the "Paris of Asia," and the 1930's was a time of great
change as the world was on the brink of war. According to the summary,
this book starts off in 1930's Shanghai but the characters end up in
San Francisco, which obviously is another amazing city. Setting aside,
the characters are what really make this book, and I can see why See
(haha) is such a popular writer. Her actual writing style is not
particularly standout, you wouldn't be able to recognize it, but she
is able to choose and capture characters and setting in an engaging
way that makes it hard to stop reading. The main characters in this
book are sisters Pearl and May Chin, and anyone who has a sister can
immediately relate to them. I have an older sister (who is amazing and
I love to pieces) and I definitely saw her mature, hardworking type-A
personality in Pearl, while I saw a lot of myself in the impulsive,
immature younger sister May (hey, gotta keep it real here). Although I
can't relate, I'm sure many sisters could relate to the rivalry and
jealousy between them, but that drama filled relationship is part of
what makes the story interesting. here were points in the book where
the dialogue was a little ridiculous and contrived, but maybe that's
how they roll in the 1930's. There were also a few wartime scenes that
were painful to read or seemed to drag on too long, but otherwise this
was a terrific, and SISTER-rific, read.