Quilt, Read, Eat, Sleep.... What Else Is There? discussion
What are you reading right now?
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A Single Thread
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Kathryn
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Jun 02, 2011 03:31PM

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If any of you who want to read this book with the group that's forming and you have a Kindle, I can loan the book to you. If you've never borrowed a Kindle book, you have 14 days from the time I loan it to read it. You can only loan a book once, so if there's more than one person who wants to read it, it will be first come first, uh, get the book! :-)






http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/custome...

"...I love quilting, the sheer geometry of it, the endless patterns and combinations that can be achieved by the arrangement and rearrangement of something as simple as a straight line. The order and precision of quilting appeals to that part of me that wants a refuge from life's chaos, while the unbounded possibilitys of color, fabric and finishing speak to the part of me that wants to live life surprised..."
Isn't that true, we want to live life surprised?

Loved that quote. Also captures the way I feel about quilting too!

OK. Once again the messages from this thread were not sent to my e-mail. Dang!
First, to see if a book you own is loanable, you go to your list of books on the Amazon/Kindle site. Under the title is a "-" mark. Click on that and you get more info. A button will appear if the book is loanable. I think it also says if it's not loanable.
Sheila, send me your e-mail address to my e-mail address. I think that's what I need. You might give me your last name, too. I then just put your name in the lend place and you'll get a message that says the book is available for you. You then have 14 days, like I said before, to read it. At the end of the 14 days if you haven't deleted it from your list (which actually means you move it to your archives), you will get a message that says you can no longer read the book.
Here's my e-mail address:
quilts@collinscom.net
Judy
First, to see if a book you own is loanable, you go to your list of books on the Amazon/Kindle site. Under the title is a "-" mark. Click on that and you get more info. A button will appear if the book is loanable. I think it also says if it's not loanable.
Sheila, send me your e-mail address to my e-mail address. I think that's what I need. You might give me your last name, too. I then just put your name in the lend place and you'll get a message that says the book is available for you. You then have 14 days, like I said before, to read it. At the end of the 14 days if you haven't deleted it from your list (which actually means you move it to your archives), you will get a message that says you can no longer read the book.
Here's my e-mail address:
quilts@collinscom.net
Judy
Sandy wrote: "Sheila, here's a direct link (I hope) to the page with info about Kindle Lending. It does look like you can only loan the books that the publisher enables for loaning.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/he..."
That is correct - only the ones the publishers OK.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/he..."
That is correct - only the ones the publishers OK.


Yesterday, as I got into the meat of the book, I tried to cheat and find a name, any name (through squinty eyes so as not to get too much info) on the last two pages of the book but failed. Turns out the last page was a preview of her next book, so no wonder!

Is everyone going to read the next one, A Thread of Truth?
The fourth in the series Threading the Needle is a giveawy here on goodreads. You've got until the end of the month to enter.

But don't you think that's because 1) the women at the shelter are there for a limited amount of time and need everything ASAP and 2) the quilts the women made at the shelter were, for the most part, for their children. No one I know would give a baby quilt that was hand pieced.

I think that's probably true in most shops, Kathryn; but don't Abigail, et al, do the hand piecing because they're making blocks for the pink quilt on the pink quilt day? (It's been a while since I read this book.)

These things stood out for / resonated with me:
Abigail: having acquaintances over friends is so much easier, but less likely to make the world a better place.
Liza: Her rebellion and speechless, scowling, appalled glares to Abigail for the latter's hypocrisies painted a great picture of an artist
Margot: Loved Abigail's comment that optimism / faith are often mistaken for naivete. I also appreciated the theme of forgiveness initiated with Margot. Although I love great vengeance in novels, (Count of Monte Cristo pops loudly in my ear) forgiveness is probably one of the biggest, hardest themes in real life.
Evelyn: Author did a wonderful job giving reader an inkling into the challenges facing one with breast cancer.
Mary Dell: What incredible powers a forceful personality can wield!

Two favorite quotes from book (so far)--pg 75, "...but buying fabric for a quilt involves much more than just an exchnge of money for goods; it is commitment of time, an act of love, the opening paragraph of a story." And, pg. ..."Since our great-great-grandmothers' time,quilters have always created community. Quilting is about getting together and helping each other, sharing life, cheering one another on through good times and bad."
My own grandmother used to talk about her quilting circles (with her sister-in-law--my grandfather had 7 brothers). It was always a great time to exchange ideas, fabric, pattern, discusse family issues, and just be "women."
My first quilt was hand sewn and tacked. In fact I still have my grandmother's tacked quilt-my mom made my youngest a tacked quilt when she married in 2003-one of the last quilts she did before her death. She had also started a quilt for my oldest that she was going to tack. So I will be finishing it this fall. Some of the qreatest gifts are the ones that are sewn from the "heart" with loving fingers!


Kit, the two quotations you listed were also marked in mine. I read that first one over a few times and let it soak in. That's something that non-quilters just don't understand, right? I was just telling someone tonight that buying new fabric is fun because, "It's just full of such possibilities!"
I learned to quilt from my mom and always thought it was just her and me in the family tree. After she passed away, I found antique quilts in one of her closets and discovered, through conversations with her sisters about where those quilts had come from, that I'm actually at least a 5th generation quilter. Boy, did that turn my head around! I definitely started taking my quiltmaking a lot more seriously now that I realize I'm the only one in my generation carrying it on. (And boy, do I treasure those family quilts. I'm humbled to be the repositor.)

It was so much apart of my mother's generation-and seems like such a loss now. It was a wonderful way to connect with all of them!
I pick up the next two books today. Can't wait to start reading them! I like the ending of the story-I need to find a Charlie!


My grandma's quilting and crocheting intrigued me as a child, but it wasn't til I was older that I had time to nurture and explore those latent interests. So although she never knew, her hobbies were like gifts to me.
Good luck on repairing your quilts!

Repairing quilts is truly a love of the craft and an art. We have a couple of ladies in our area that we go to for that type of expertise....


Sheila, I so glad you enjoyed the book and that I was able to loan it to you! I think Bostwick is a great author!
As for repairing old quilts, the only thing I know, if you can't match the fabric to replace it, is to blind-stitch netting or toile over the shattered piece. I guess I'm assuming the fabric is shattered; it may not be. At any rate, I think it's OK if you can find vintage fabric to replace the binding.
As for repairing old quilts, the only thing I know, if you can't match the fabric to replace it, is to blind-stitch netting or toile over the shattered piece. I guess I'm assuming the fabric is shattered; it may not be. At any rate, I think it's OK if you can find vintage fabric to replace the binding.

Kit, maybe you mis-typed and already know this, but there are 4 books in Bostwick's Cobbled Court series. Threading the Needle just came out within the past week or so.

I need to read The Peach Keeper next for later June, and finish The Whiskey Rebels (about 1/3 way through) for my local July book group. But I think I can squeeze A Single Thread in there, too! Now that I think about it I may drop by HPB on my way home to see if they have a copy. That way I can get it in my stack . . . yes, STACK! :)
You've probably already left for the bookstore, Joy, but yes, A Single Thread is the first in the series.
As for your TBR stack, I think we all have them! LOL! Unfortunately, I have 2: one on my Kindle and the other in my studio in the bookcase. I keep thinking I'll quit buying books and read what I have, but that's probably not going to happen in this lifetime!
As for your TBR stack, I think we all have them! LOL! Unfortunately, I have 2: one on my Kindle and the other in my studio in the bookcase. I keep thinking I'll quit buying books and read what I have, but that's probably not going to happen in this lifetime!


Too funny.
You know, the thing I like best about my Kindle is not ending up with the stacks of books tipping over my nightstand the way I used to...on the other hand, though, it's hard to flip back a few pages to remind yourself of which character did what that set up the current situation you're reading about. Win some, lose some.

Sandy, I agree about the negative side of the Kindle but no one knows you are a book hoarder even if you have 1000 books in your archive. Who's to know, right?

Fabric stashes: 1. Double as insulation, 2. Serve as personalized 401 Ks - buy now, use later. Seems like a WIN / WIN situation!
Re: it's hard to flip back a few pages to remind yourself of which character did what... - that's one of the really frustrating things about audiobooks. I get confused a lot - especially if characters names start with the same letter or have a similar syllable cadence.
Joy wrote: "You know, the thing I like best about my Kindle is not ending up with the stacks of books tipping over my nightstand the way I used to...on the other hand, though, it's hard to flip back a few pages to remind yourself of which character did what that set up the current situation you're reading about. "
Joy, while we don't have toppling stacks of books, we have pages of books. How many pages do you have? I have 10. I had it down to 9 until I bought 5 books today. As for searching, have discovered the "search" feature? I use it a lot. I can usually remember a word or a specific name. I search for that, read what I need to remind me of whatever, and use "back" to get back to where I was.
Joy, while we don't have toppling stacks of books, we have pages of books. How many pages do you have? I have 10. I had it down to 9 until I bought 5 books today. As for searching, have discovered the "search" feature? I use it a lot. I can usually remember a word or a specific name. I search for that, read what I need to remind me of whatever, and use "back" to get back to where I was.

Well I was down to 10 pages of books on my Kindle too...until my Aunt Judy (see above) bought 5 new ones today. Guess that means I'm up to 11. Ah, if only I didn't have to work and I could read all day!! I would be in heaven!
FYI: Jaci and I share a Kindle account. It works out really well. We both like the same kinds of books, so whatever one buys the other will like. We can each download them to our Kindle. I think you can have 5 Kindles on an account.


I liked both of the above books. Won't give any spoilers!!!
The adult summer reading program is going on here--the grand prize is a "nook." I have about 40 books at the moment I'm trying to get thru--so I will probably disappear for days at a time!!!

Books mentioned in this topic
A Thread of Truth (other topics)A Thread of Truth (other topics)
Threading the Needle (other topics)
A Single Thread (other topics)