Showing posts with label Willa Cather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Willa Cather. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Blanket Sections Complete! + 3 books

 I managed to get the third and last section of my


I will need to decide on the order of the three
sections, bind off 
and choose a border colour... 


It is going to come together to be lovely
and I am so thrilled by the progress!


I finished Luci Shaw's book,
it was a good read and I enjoyed it,
gave lots of food for thought and I appreciated the 
words towards the end that 
spoke to me of God's
all encompassing love.
I am still reading Willa Cather's Song of a Lark
and began re-reading Charles William's
*
What are you reading and creating?
Do tell and Yarn Along with us! 

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Towards Completion: Blue Blanket, Little White Horse + 2 others


Third and last section of my blue Checkered blanket is 
over half way done!


After this I have to decide what colour to use
for the boarder 
and I hope it will be done in the next weeks!


Re-read Elizabeth Gougde's The Little White Horse,
which is such a happy delightful book,
I highly recommend it!
*
Also still reading Willa Cather's 
Song of the Lark and A Grace Disguised: How a Soul Grows Through Loss.
Both very worthy books to read.
*
What are you creating and reading?
Yarn Along with us!


Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Beautiful Blue! A Homemade Life, Willa Cather and Finished Remains


I am happy show show that another square of my 
blued checkered blanket is done! 


I am just beginning the third square of section three! 


Rookie mistake: 
I began the section thinking the beginning was the top
of the next section, 
thus I would have the dark square on the top 
where it was on the bottom of the first section,
all to realize that by knitting that one first,
it would be on the bottom...
but no problem, I will simply bind off and switch it 
so it is that. :) 


I read a bit of Molly's Homemade Life
and started on the introduction to Cather's 
Song of the Lark


And I finished 
Remains of the Day
in the end it was not as suspenseful as the one 
section was showing it to be, 
and in the end I saw it as a man
narrating his 30 year career serving as a top crust English Butler 
who was seeking to be as good as his father, 
an English Butler before him,
and how he had to come to terms with the life - and death - of his
employer, Lord Darlington, who was well meaning
but used by the Nazis and in the end you see
Stevens not only come to terms with things which for him
was being able to name what had happened...
and he began to let himself be a human being instead of
a constant total always in character
of a perfect English Butler,
who served, was utterly unflappable and always at the height of 
what it means to have dignity
*
So I have read two books that my beloved Mr. Husband read
in graduate school and he asked me which one I like more,
Remains of the Day or Saint Maybe
and well, they were so different, so I could not say
one or another though to me it is clear that the 
characters in Saint Maybe had a deeper turn 
and growth in their lives
because they saw that they were incomplete on their own 
and went looking for something greater to help them.
I think that this is the crux of many lives, if not all lives,
though not all, like Stevens the Butler, admit that they have
need of anything greater to personally help them.
*
Well, as a Christian I have gained so much help
and I still see that my life can be a mess of confusion at times 
and a constant struggle;
Fr. Thomas Hopko's 55 Maxims shows that one 
must except struggle and temptation to one's last breath,
and I can say through experience, through observation, 
through reading, that I can't imagine 
not having that which is greater to help me;
and by this I mean the Holy Trinity whose 
Second Person Christ is willing and waiting to provide that 
greater help.
*
Well, a more philosophical/theological yarn along post
but with me and my blog I find I never
know what will be next!
*
I really appreciated the author of Remains of the Day
and how he shows a time period and culture in England that
was quickly passing away after WWII and his sad
yet beautiful book.
*
It would be interesting to compare it to 
L'Engle's A Severed Wasp that is dealing with a culture
in the States that is also in many ways passing away
and what is found there in.
*
So with all that...
what are you reading and creating? 
Yarn Along with us! 

Wednesday, November 05, 2014

9 years blogging, blanket progress and three books


My blanket is coming along!
I am on the 4th grey stripe!
About half way done with the body,
then to learn to make a boarder for it!
*
Reading various books...
Re-reading Letters to an American Lady by Lewis
{Mr. Husband and I have a strong marriage but there
are seasons I am told and we know that to maintain
anything work is needed so I am glad to be reading this book!}
and soon to start O Pioneers! by Willa Cather as I loved
*
This week my blog is 9 years running! 
First post was Wednesday November 5, 2005!
A lot has changed since then...
I am grateful for God for my life now
and for all of my blog friends throughout the years!
Thanks to all of you!!!
*
So tell me:
what are you reading and creating today?
Do yarn along with us!