The Knitting Circle by Ann Hood: Book Cover

    The Knitting Circle by Ann Hood

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    (Hardcover)

    • Pub. Date: January 2007
    • 384pp

      Reader Rating: (16 ratings)

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: January 2007
      • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
      • Format: Hardcover, 384pp

      Synopsis

      In the spirit of How to Make an American Quilt and The Joy Luck Club, a novel about friendship and redemption.

      After the sudden loss of her only child, Stella, Mary Baxter joins a knitting circle in Providence, Rhode Island, as a way to fill the empty hours and lonely days, not knowing that it will change her life. Alice, Scarlet, Lulu, Beth, Harriet, and Ellen welcome Mary into their circle despite her reluctance to open her heart to them. Each woman teaches Mary a new knitting technique, and, as they do, they reveal to her their own personal stories of loss, love, and hope. Eventually, through the hours they spend knitting and talking together, Mary is finally able to tell her own story of grief, and in so doing reclaims her love for her husband, faces the hard truths about her relationship with her mother, and finds the spark of life again. By an "engrossing storyteller," this new novel once again "works its magic" (Sue Monk Kidd).

      The Washington Post - Carrie Brown

      The Knitting Circle was written after Hood's own tragic loss, the death of her young daughter, and it is not hard to imagine the ways in which writing this novel must have been both painful and therapeutic. It is a wondrously simple book about something complicated: the nearly unendurable process of enduring after a great loss. The novel, like knitting, seems to make itself up as it goes along, the threads bound and gathered into a whole. In the end, there is something where there once was nothing: a scarf, a pair of socks, solace where there once was pain. Little by little, by knit and by purl, Mary's empty hands are once again full.

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      Biography

      Ann Hood is the author of seven novels and a short-story collection, An Ornithologist's Guide to Life. She lives in Providence, Rhode Island.

      Customer Reviews

      Unfortunately what I expectedby Anonymous

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      July 27, 2009: As a knitter and a Rhode Islander I enjoyed the book but as a reader I did not. Characters were cliched and unintentionally comical in their tragic lives. The idea was a good one but the characters didn't work for me.

      How is this not a featured book instead of FNKC?by Anonymous

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      September 08, 2008: I read this book shortly after it came out I also read 'Friday Night Knitting Club.' How this book wasn't as highly featured as FNKC, I'll never know as it was a far superior book. The characters were 'real' and enjoyable. The same can't be said of all of the others that claim this genre. Spending a lot of time in bookstores, I have suggested this book to several who want to read a lighter mystery.


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