A Good Yarn
β Scribed by Macomber, Debbie
- Book ID
- 109153615
- Publisher
- Mira
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 176 KB
- Series
- Knitting Books 2
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781426800818
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Macomber revisits the cozy Seattle yarn store of 2004's The Shop on Blossom Street in another heartfelt tale of crafts and camaraderie. After a slow beginning, this sequel clips along satisfyingly, as shop owner Lydia, a cancer survivor, and her no-nonsense sister, Margaret, meet three new and conveniently quite different friends and bond over the complications of life. Overweight, depressed teenager Courtney Pulanski has found herself plopped into a new town for her senior year, living with her grandma while her dad works in Brazil. Bethanne Hamlin, a recent divorcΓ©e, and Elise Beaumont, who's been single for years, are both still suffering from their broken marriages. Serving as sounding boards and sources of endless support for each other, the women find friendship and, of course, resolution for their problems (the latter a little too easily). Readers will miss The Shop on Blossom Street 's spirited Jacqueline, who plays a minor role here, and a few thingsβlike the character of Elise's ex-husband, Maverickβstrain credibility. But the author's trademark warm treatment of the lives of women will satisfy her readers. Despite occasional draughts of treacle and a too-easy denouement, this should be another Macomber bestseller. (May)
Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From
Following on the success of The Shop on Blossom Street (2005), Macomber offers another tale of women meeting and becoming good friends in a knitting class. When Lydia Hoffman, owner of A Good Yarn, offers a class in knitting socks, Elise Beaumont, a self--contained and efficient divorced woman in her sixties, appears. Embroiled in a lawsuit, she has little patience with the foibles of others. Meanwhile, Bethanne Hamlin's husband left her for another woman on Valentine's Day. Bethanne's spent her life making a good home for her family, and now, bereft of self-esteem and support, she has to find a job. And, finally, there's Courtney Pulanski, who's come to live with her grandmother for her senior year of high school. After her mother's death four years ago, Courtney went a little wild and stuffed all her emotions down with food; now she's alone, overweight, and unhappy. But soon an unbreakable bond is formed among the knitters in this sweet and poignant story of real women with real problems becoming real friends. Maria Hatton
Copyright Β© American Library Association. All rights reserved
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
**Come back to Blossom Street in book 2 of this beloved series by #1** **New York Times** **bestselling author Debbie Macomber.** Lydia Hoffman owns a knitting shop on Seattle's Blossom Street. In the year since it opened, A Good Yarn has thrivedβand so has Lydia. A lot of that is due to Brad Goe
_You might have heard about a wonderful little yarn store in downtown Seattle. Debbie Macomber can take you there! Thousands of women discovered it when they read her bestselling novel_ The Shop on Blossom Street. _Whether this is a return visit or your very first, you'll find that A Good Yarn
### From Publishers Weekly Macomber revisits the cozy Seattle yarn store of 2004's _The Shop on Blossom Street_ in another heartfelt tale of crafts and camaraderie. After a slow beginning, this sequel clips along satisfyingly, as shop owner Lydia, a cancer survivor, and her no-nonsense sister, Marg