- Pub. Date: November 2008
- Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
- Format: Hardcover , 336pp
Synopsis (Borrowed from B & N)
Knit Two, by Kate Jacobs, returns to the Manhattan knitting store Walker and Daughter five years after the death of the store's owner, Georgia Walker. Georgia's daughter Dakota is now an 18 year old freshman at NYU, running the knitting store part-time with the help of the members of the Friday Night Knitting Club. Drawn together by their love for Dakota and the sense of family the club provides, each knitter is struggling with new challenges: for Catherine, finding love after divorce, for Darwin, newborn twins, for Lucie, being both a single mom and caregiver for her elderly mother, and for seventy something Anita, marriage to her sweetheart Marty over the objections of her grown children.As Kate Jacobs returns to the world of Walker and Daughter, she's once again keyed into many of the stresses and joys of being a mother, wife, daughter and friend. Every woman who picks up this book will see themselves in its characters—the very thing that made The Friday Night Knitting Club such a huge success...
My viewpoints: I found this book a bit slow at the start, but, if you can get through the first two chapters, the pace does pick up.
The main characters that were in the first book of this series, "The Friday Night Knitting Club" are back, and each dealing in their own way with the grief of Georgia Walker, who died five years earlier, of cancer.
This time around we find everyone seems to be struggling with their own problems. Be it child rearing, friendships, love affairs, college, what they want to pursue as a career, an aging mother, etc. I personally didn't enjoy this book as much as the first in the series, "The Friday Night Knitting Club." However it was a nice comfort reading book. But, let me say this, it was not a fast read, or a page turner for me. I finished the book, and gave it 3***. It was an OK read.
I borrowed this book from the Library.
The main characters that were in the first book of this series, "The Friday Night Knitting Club" are back, and each dealing in their own way with the grief of Georgia Walker, who died five years earlier, of cancer.
This time around we find everyone seems to be struggling with their own problems. Be it child rearing, friendships, love affairs, college, what they want to pursue as a career, an aging mother, etc. I personally didn't enjoy this book as much as the first in the series, "The Friday Night Knitting Club." However it was a nice comfort reading book. But, let me say this, it was not a fast read, or a page turner for me. I finished the book, and gave it 3***. It was an OK read.
I borrowed this book from the Library.