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Knitting Under the Influence

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0 of 1 copy available
When you're in your late twenties and nothing in your life seems to be falling into place, knitting is an awfully seductive way to spend your free time — especially when life doesn't come with a stitch counter.
Kathleen, Sari, and Lucy's Sunday knitting circle is the only thing holding them together. Kathleen has been cut off financially by her family and forced to enter "the real world" for the very first time. Sari has fallen for the man who made her life a living hell in high school, but now desperately needs her help. Lucy, torn between emotion and reason, must reevaluate her life when her lab and her boyfriend are assailed by an animal-rights group.
At their club meetings, they discuss the really important questions: how bad is it, really, to marry for money if you like the guy a lot anyway? Can you ever forgive someone for something truly atrocious that they've done? Is it better to be unhappily coupled than happily alone? And the little ones: Can you wear a bra with a hand-knit tube top? Is it ever acceptable to knit something for a boyfriend? And why do your stitches become lopsided after your second martini?
In Claire LaZebnik's hilarious and sometimes heartbreaking novel, Sari, Lucy, and Kathleen's lives intersect, overlap, unravel, and come back together in an utterly satisfying read.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 24, 2006
      Three L.A. girlfriends keep it together with their Sunday morning knitting circle in LaZebnik's sophomore warm-fuzzy (after Same as It Never Was
      ). Charming, irresponsible Kathleen Winters is dependent on her identical twin sisters (semi-famous actresses reminiscent of Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen) for a paycheck and a home. After drunkenly spilling family secrets to a reporter, she sets off in a turquoise Mini Cooper to find an apartment and job of her own. Meanwhile, scientific researcher Lucy Cameron questions her career and love life as her lab and her self-righteous boyfriend become the targets of animal rights activists. Sari Hill faces the deepest conflict of all when the same "good-looking asshole" who tortured her brother in high school shows up with his autistic son at the autism clinic where she works. Each young woman re-examines her beliefs as the knitting projects—a hot pink bikini, a midnight blue baby blanket, a sweater—pass by. The tangled paths to three satisfying resolutions are marked by hot sex, an adorable gray kitten and, above all else, girl talk. LaZebnik juggles periods of personal crisis while maintaining her characters' complex individuality. Social knitters, especially, will relate to the bond that strengthens over the click-clack of the girls' needles.

    • Library Journal

      August 15, 2006
      Three twentysomething friends get together every Sunday morning for their knitting circle. This is not your mother's knitting circle -knitted tube tops and bikinis figure prominently. Flighty, gorgeous Kathleen wants to change her life after quitting her job as assistant to her actress twin sisters. Lucy, a scientist and former fatty, wants to think she has the perfect relationship with her boss and lover, James. And sensible Sari, a therapist working with autistic children, tries not to fall for Jason, the father of a client. Sari's story has the most emotional resonance -author LaZebnik ("Same As It Never Was") cowrote a nonfiction book on autism and has an autistic son -as she struggles with her feelings for Jason, whom she believes tormented her autistic brother in high school. Refreshingly, the gals' banter is often acerbic but never catty. They are truly devoted friends, and the men in their lives are merely the icing on the cake. The characters and problems here are more realistically portrayed than in many chick-lit books, which makes this a nice combination of humor and heartache. Recommended." -Lisa Davis-Craig, Canton P.L., MI"

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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