Knit Two
Knit Two book cover

Knit Two

Price
$5.33
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
Putnam Adult
Publication Date
Dimensions
6.26 x 1.21 x 9.3 inches
Weight
1.15 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Continuing the warm-and-fuzzy saga begun in her popular The Friday Night Knitting Club, Jacobs stitches together another winning tale of the New York City knitting circle, more a sisterhood than a hobby group (the irascible Darwin Chiu can't even really knit). In this installment-and it does feel like an installment-readers catch up five years after the unexpected, book-capping death of club leader (and knitting shop owner Georgia Walker. Georgia's 18-year-old Dakota is at NYU, discovering her first love, while her father James and Georgia's best friend Catherine are still coming to terms. The rest of the cast runs a wide gamut of ages and experience, but is easier to follow this time around, as Jacobs is more comfortable giving them more space and backstory. Pregnant, whip-smart professor Darwin and her husband, Dan, are welcoming twins; video director and single mom Lucie is coping with a hyperactive 5-year-old and a failing parent; Georgia's old mentor, the wise Anita, begins questioning her own motives; and everyone's stories cross paths in satisfying, organic ways. A trip to Italy provides some forward motion, and pays off in a charming denouementthat nevertheless pushes a familiar it's-the-journey-not-the-destination message; still, this sequel is as comforting, enveloping and warm as a well-crafted afghan. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Jacobs’ follow-up to the popular novel The Friday Night Knitting Club (2007) opens five years after Georgia Walker’s tragic death from ovarian cancer. Her daughter, Dakota, isxa0 now a freshman at NYU, and Georgia’s former employee, Peri, is running Georgia’s yarn shop, Walker and Daughter. The group Georgia formed, the Friday Night Knitting Club, lives onxa0in her absence despite how different all of the members are. Seventy-eight-year-old Anita is planning her wedding to deli owner Marty, despite opposition from her children. Serious professor Darwin is dealing with first-time motherhood and is frustrated that her best friend, Lucie, isn’t around to help. Lucie is trying to juggle her career as a producer with caring for her aging mother and difficult daughter. Georgia’s best friend, Catherine, is reassessing her life and her failed relationships. Reading Jacobs’ second knitting novelxa0is as warming and cheering asxa0visiting old friends. News of axa0forthcomingxa0movie version of the first book will increase demand. --Kristine Huntley Kate Jacobs is the author of The Friday Night Knitting Club and Comfort Food . A former magazine writer and editor, she lives in Los Angeles with her husband. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The Sequel to the Beloved #1
  • New York Times
  • Bestseller
  • The Friday Night Knitting Club
  • The sequel to the number-one
  • New York Times
  • bestseller
  • The Friday Night Knitting Club, KNIT TWO
  • returns to Walker and Daughter, the Manhattan knitting store founded by Georgia Walker and her young daughter, Dakota. Dakota is now an eighteen-year-old freshman at NYU, running the little yarn shop part-time with help from the members of the Friday Night Knitting Club. Drawn together by the sense of family the club has created, the knitters rely on one another as they struggle with new challenges: for Catherine, finding love after divorce; for Darwin, the hope for a family; for Lucie, being both a single mom and a caregiver for her elderly mother; and for seventysomething Anita, a proposal of marriage from her sweetheart, Marty, that provokes the objections of her grown children. As the club’s projects—an afghan, baby booties, a wedding coat—are pieced together, so is their understanding of the patterns underlying the stresses and joys of being mother, wife, daughter, and friend. Because it isn’t the difficulty of the garment that makes you a great knitter: it’s the care and attention you bring to the craft—as well as how you adapt to surprises.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(262)
★★★★
25%
(219)
★★★
15%
(131)
★★
7%
(61)
23%
(201)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not worth it/disappointing

I haven't finished reading this book yet, but nearly halfway through it...I'm just sick of it. I have just realized that I'm not reading this book out of enjoyment at all, but just to finish it. The sad thing is I've already downloaded to audiobook for Knit the Season.

The most annoying thing about this book (so far, since I'm not done) is that for, I kid you not, the first EIGHT chapters all you hear about is Georgia. Georgia Georgia Georgia. I miss Georgia, she was my best friend, she was a great mother, she ran the store so well and this and that and blah blah blah. I felt like screaming at the characters "She's been dead for five years! Move on with your lives!"

At least with the first book there was an interesting plot and some action going on, Georgia's long lost best friend and long lost baby-daddy arrive and around the same time and she has to cope with the emotional joys and stresses and at the same time Catherine is dealing with her pending divorce with Adam. Nothing like that in this book. Just a boring book about the boring lives of far too many characters that continue to mope and whine for 320 pages. As far as I can see this book is just the result of Kate Jacobs taking advantage of the fact that the first book was so popular that her readers will buy the second even if its crap (which it is).
6 people found this helpful
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One dissatisfied customer

Very, very, disappointing. I was looking forward to this arriving but it took almost two weeks to get to me and the condition was awful. The pages were damaged by some sort of pink liquid. I'm very disappointed in my order.
1 people found this helpful
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Superficial Characters

I found the narrative to be disjointed and the charaters not very well developed. The idea of a female support group based ona traditional pastime, i.e. knitting is a good one. I might have enjoyed the book more had I read the first one but I am of the opinion that each book should stand on its' own.
1 people found this helpful
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Very disappointed

I ordered a new book for what I thought was a good price. When I received it, the cover was all scuffed and the upper right hand corner was all gummed up with I think was a removed price sticker. There was also a black marker line drawn across all the pages on the outside of the book. This was clearly a used book. If I order a used item I know I am taking a chance that it will arrive in that condition. I ordered a new book. Very disappointed with Amazon.
1 people found this helpful
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I'll try the pattern and the recipe

I enjoy knitting; therefore, books about knitting compatriots will lure me in. I may read the first book. This book, however, could have been more interesting. I felt the summer long excursion to Italy was a bit unrealistic. Sadly it seems like the author has definite favorite characters; Kate Jacobs' 'pets' were characters I was least interested in. I am pulled in by average people with average income and lives. I wish they'd have 'summered' in the Adirondacks. This book takes place in NYC; why not have a club member of Puerto Rican background, or a male, and please include fewer self-centered angst-ers and more people with a sense of humor (like the Two Broke Girls). I would like to make the afghan and depending on my free time, I may pick up the first book since many readers found it preferable. I obtain the greatest take-aways from books when the characters find ways to cope with everyday problems such as sandwich generation, career crossroads etc. Maybe some of us pick up knitting needles as a way to put serenity and order into our lives.
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wonderful book

I read Kate Jacob's first novel "The Friday Night Knitting Club" and just loved it! The sequel is as wonderful
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The Sequel Was Great, too!

I really enjoy Kate Jacobs' writing and this book was no exception. Charming! Thank you for the speedy shipping! The book is in beautiful condition, too. Thanks again.
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Another Winner

This author holds my attention with each story in this series! I enjoyed this book very much and would recommend it.
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A FRIENDSHIP JOURNEY

In the sequel to [[ASIN:0425265269 The Friday Night Knitting Club]], [[ASIN:B0035G0236 Knit Two]] picks up a few years after the first story ends.

Georgia, the owner of the Walker and Daughter Knitting shop, who died in the first book, is a big part of this tale. Her presence continues in the minds and hearts of those left behind: the group of friends who comprised the knitting club. Women of all ages from a variety of backgrounds and experiences, they show us bits and pieces of who they are, moving ahead.

Dakota, as Georgia's daughter and co-owner of the shop, is a freshman at NYU. There she is, trying to figure out who she is and what she wants, and whether or not she will forever be tied to the shop; will she continue her mother's dream, or will she find out what the shop means to her in the present?

What I enjoyed most about this story was the wide age-range of the characters, from Anita, a seventy-something woman on down to the teenaged Dakota. In between are the forty-somethings and the thirty-somethings, proving once again that age is not what defines us. Even those who didn't knit in the first book are now finding their own pace, while discovering other things that connect them to one another.

A trip to Italy brings together a group of people joined by business, but in the end, something further connects them. What is Anita's big secret, and what is the meaning behind the mysterious postcards she receives? How does Catherine's telephone connection to a man named Marco--an Italian winemaker--lead them all to the answers one of them has pursued? And what seemingly tragic event forms the basis for a whole new definition for the shop and for each of them? There were some predictable parts to the story, but I enjoyed how everything came together in the end. In the final section, recipes and knitting patterns are brought out for the reader. A book that knitters will enjoy, it also offers the reader a feel-good peek into the world of friendships between women, in glorious settings, from Manhattan to Italy. Four stars.
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more in depth discovery of the circle of friends in the first book

The second novel gives a full circle, in depth picture of all the members of the Friday Night Knitting Club. You get a closer look at each person and how lives evolve yet kindred spirits remain woven together as tightly as family. Loved this book!

After this read....
[[ASIN:B005EP26NU Knit the Season: A Friday Night Knitting Club Novel (Friday Night Knitting Club Novels)]]