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The Friday Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs
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The Friday Night Knitting Club

by Kate Jacobs

Series: The Friday Night Knitting Club (1)

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2,1431101,484 (3.37)98
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Berkley Trade (2008), Paperback, 384 pages

Member:bluesviola
Collections:Your libraryRating:***
Tags:mobile lib - chick
(12) 2007 (14) 2008 (29) 2009 (16) book club (18) cancer (42) chick lit (76) contemporary fiction (13) crafts (8) family (14) fiction (245) friendship (59) knitting (201) knitting fiction (9) mothers and daughters (21) New York (24) New York City (23) novel (24) NYC (10) own (18) read (30) read in 2008 (18) read in 2009 (12) relationships (26) romance (13) Scotland (9) TBR (24) unread (17) women (50) women's fiction (11)
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English (107)  Spanish (1)  French (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (110)
Showing 1-5 of 107 (next | show all)
Sweet story, just what I was in the mood to read at the time. It definitely made me want to start knitting during and after I finished reading it. It's kind of like the Jane Austen book club but with knitting replacing the books :). ( )
  Sefarina | Dec 29, 2009 |
I just finished The Friday Night Knitting Club. I found it hard to get into at first. I love knitting and have been in knitting groups. About 100 pages in I got the feeling of the group. Then I couldn't put the book down. I am not sure how I feel about the end. I wanted more. ( )
  freestar | Dec 26, 2009 |
It was a good book! A story of friendship, mothers and daughters, and losing someone you love. It does have a sad ending. ( )
  Ames3473 | Nov 28, 2009 |
I read this book after having several of my friends recommend it. It was also a book club selection for our work book club. I thought it was going to be great but I was pretty disappointed. I didn't really think the females in the book were all that spectacular. They all had issues which just annoyed me more than anything. I didn't care about any of these characters! Maybe there were too many people...I'm not really sure but I felt like I didn't really get to know any of them. I also thought it was way too predictable to be sad at the end. This book seemed to have way to many cliches...unwed mother, cheating, widower, woman scorned, feminist etc etc. The writing wasn't terrible so it would be a good book if you just want something you don't have to think about but if you want something a little deeper try something else. ( )
  b_arnold | Oct 26, 2009 |
I loved the story and the women! I was a part of a craft group of women (making baskets) for seventeen years. So I could identify. We got each other through life, and much of the time was talking, not necessarily weaving. As was shown in this story, we "raised" each other's children. The book is not very well written, a bit stilted. But I enjoyed the topic and will probably read more of Kate Jacobs' books. ( )
  dorle2you | Oct 17, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 107 (next | show all)
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Open Tuesday to Saturday, 10 A.M -- 8 P.M. No exceptions! The hours of WALKER AND DAUGHTER, KNITTERS were clearly displayed in multicolored letters on a white sandwich board placed just so at the top of the stair landing.
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Book description
A group of plucky, crafty women in contemporary NYC meet at Manhattan yarn shop every Friday night to share knitting techniques and personal dramas. While the characters are not particularly well developed, the knitting details are interesting. Sadly, this story takes a melodramatic, tragic turn at the end precluding using the novel for a light, fun, "brain candy" recommendation. ljh 11/13/09

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0399154094, Hardcover)

A charming and moving novel about female friendship and the experiences that knit us together-even when we least expect it. Walker and Daughter is Georgia Walker's little yarn shop, tucked into a quiet storefront on Manhattan's Upper West Side. The Friday Night Knitting Club was started by some of Georgia's regulars, who gather once a week to work on their latest projects and to chat-and occasionally clash-over their stories of love, life, and everything in between. Georgia has her hands full, juggling the demands of running the store and raising her spunky teen daughter, Dakota, by herself. Thank goodness for Anita, her mentor and dear friend, and the rest of the members of the knitting club-who are just as varied as the skeins of yarn in the shop's bins. There's Peri, a prelaw student turned handbag designer; Darwin, a somewhat aloof feminist grad student; and Lucie, a petite, quiet woman who's harboring some secrets of her own. However, unexpected changes soon throw these women's lives into disarray, and the shop's comfortable world gets shaken up like a snow globe. James, Georgia's ex, decides that he wants to play a larger role in Dakota's life-and possibly Georgia's as well. Cat, a former friend from high school, returns to New York as a rich Park Avenue wife and uneasily renews her old bond with Georgia. Meanwhile, Anita must confront her growing (and reciprocated) feelings for Marty, the kind neighborhood deli owner. And when the unthinkable happens, they realize what they've created: not just a knitting club, but a sisterhood

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400)

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