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Things I Learned From Knitting (Whether I Wanted To or Not)
Things I Learned From Knitting (Whether I Wanted To or Not)
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Author: Stephanie Pearl-mcphee
Publisher: Storey Publishing, LLC
Category: Book

List Price: $10.95
Buy New: $3.97
You Save: $6.98 (64%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $3.57

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(26 reviews)
Sales Rank: 36117

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 160
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 6.3 x 4.4 x 0.8

ISBN: 1603420622
Dewey Decimal Number: 746.432
EAN: 9781603420624
ASIN: 1603420622

Publication Date: March 19, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • Mason-Dixon Knitting Outside the Lines: Patterns, Stories, Pictures, True Confessions, Tricky Bits, Whole New Worlds, and Familiar Ones, Too
  • Yarn Harlot: The Secret Life of a Knitter
  • Stephanie Pearl-McPhee Casts Off: The Yarn Harlot's Guide to the Land of Knitting

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Yarn Harlot strikes again! Best-selling knitting author and humorist Stephanie Pearl-McPhee is back with an irresistible collection of witty observations on how knitting and life wisdom are spun together.

In Things I Learned From Knitting (Whether I Wanted To or Not), Pearl Mc-Phee examines age-old aphorisms in light of knitting. From "Hope Springs Eternal" to "A Friend In Need Is A Friend Indeed" and "Birds Of A Feather Flock Together," Pearl-McPhee casts a fresh, off-beat light on these sayings. Presented in quick, punchy takes, each entry in this book calls out to be read aloud and shared with anyone who enjoys playing with yarn and needles.

Pearl-McPhee's observations are hilarious; the situations she describes strike a familiar, "not you, too?" feeling in the heart of anyone who knits. Interspersed throughout the book are her notes on the things that "Knitting is still trying to teach me. . ." That no matter how well you knit, looking at your work too closely isn't helpful. It's like kissing with your eyes open. Nobody looks good that close up.



Customer Reviews:   Read 21 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars I still need to learn from my knitting   December 16, 2008
This book is funny and inspiring and if you knit you can't help but identify with Stephanie's pearls of wisdom. This is a fun read for any knitter who has every had his/her knitting go a little off track.


4 out of 5 stars The Practice of Craft Crafts Us   November 14, 2008
All of those great thoughts you've had about life and the cosmology of the universe, that have come to you while you had knitting needles in both hands, and couldn't find a pen anyway - well, Stephanie Pearl-McPhee wrote hers down. "Things I Learned from Knitting" is a sweet little volume of the thoughts that go through our heads while we are rescuing dropped stitches and turning cables.

Mistakes Don't Go Away Unless We Intervene.
"Now, time has passed and I have become a good knitter, having learned a great deal since those early abominations. I've gained skill and understanding, I've learned that gauge matters and that there are some colors that don't look good on me (or any human, really), and I know enough to correct my mistakes as I go along instead of knitting them into perfect infamy." (page 54, @2008 Storey Publishing, 1st edition)

Perserverance Matters.
"Knitting is still trying to teach me that things get knit faster when you actually work on them. That's why the scarf I've allegedly been knitting for two years just isn't getting any bigger, no matter how long I leave it in the basket." (page 109)

Love, To Be Deep, Can Never Be Easy
"As I stood there, looking at the decoration on this sweater that was. . . let's be frank, not working, I wondered if I would be able to forgive the sweater all of this. This mistakes, the ripping, the gauge...the errors... Perhaps it was too much pain to pass between a knitter and her sweater...Or maybe I would love it more because I had surmounted all of the troubles...I wondered if my feelings for the sweater would be like my feelings for my children, where surviving the difficult times had only endeared them to me more." (pages 67-68)

Here we see less of the funny woman and more of the real woman as McPhee shares how the practice of craft has crafted her. It does lack some of the edge and energy of McPhee's previous works, but it possesses a soft gravitas that attracts like the wistful allure of cashmere when we are on an acrylic budget. Tuck this little volume into your knitting bag and pick it up when you need a pick me up - that is, right before you pick up, rip out or redo your latest errant project.



5 out of 5 stars Laugh out loud good!   October 20, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book is laugh out loud fun! I am sure the people that ride my daily bus have decided that I have now totally flipped my gourd. I also sat with little post-it notes marking the pages that I wanted to go back to.

Seriously, if you are a knitter, you will indeed understand what she is talking about.

If you are not a knitter but love a knitter, but the book for them. The knitter in your life will thank you and you will enjoy the chortles.

Things I Learned From Knitting (Whether I Wanted To or Not)



5 out of 5 stars Perfect treadmill reading   October 9, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I'm on a knitting kick but have to do other things occasionally, such as getting on the treadmill. This little book was my answer to not being able to knit on the treadmill. I hadn't expected to actually enjoy it, but I did because from the "do over" to the yarn stash, it's all me. I thought it was entertaining and a bit profound at times.

I think it would also appeal to those hooked on crochet, and perhaps other thread crafts.

This was my first book by this author so if she repeated herself (as I read in one review), I was unaware of it.



5 out of 5 stars Knitting Humor   September 13, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Knitters everywhere will greatly enjoy this book. All knitters will be able to realte to and see some of themselves in these comical stories. A good read!


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