Friday, 19 April, 2024

By The Fibreside

Knitting and spinning on the Sunshine Coast of BC

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Life, Spinning

I should learn to slow down

I am something of a binge reader. If a book or a series really captures my interest, I find it difficult to savour them. Case in point: I took the seventh book of the Temeraire series out of the library on Wednesday night, and was done reading it by Thursday night. Coming in at almost 400 pages, that meant a lot of reading in a short space of time. But I just couldn’t stop myself. It’s so good! (I also scored the first hold on the hardcover of the eighth book at the library, which gets released next month! That always feels good, to get that first hold. It’s like winning the lottery.) I did the same thing with The Parasol Protectorate series: devouring each book in a minimum amount of time, delayed only when the library didn’t have the third book and I had to borrow it from a friend.

It doesn’t happen with all books. I’ve been reading Last of the Sky Pirates for a while now, meaning I read a bit and then it sits on the side table until I pick it up again. It’s not that I don’t enjoy it, because I do. The book’s world is a fascinating fantasy/steampunk blend, and I’m interested to see what happens to the characters. But I don’t feel the same all-consuming need to see what happens to them as I do with Will Lawrence and Temeraire, or Alexia and company, or Honor and the people in her universe (though I have been slightly disappointed in the last couple outings – didn’t mean I didn’t read them fast…). With them, I stay up until all hours, because unlike many other people I know, reading keeps me awake, rather than helps me wind down to sleep, and I have to be very careful if I do read in the evening, because often it’s, “One more chapter. Okay, one more chapter. Okay okay! But one more chapter!” until it’s three in the morning and I can pretty much write off the next day, and still may not have finished the book, depending on its size.

In any case, book 8 of Temeraire isn’t out yet, and I’m looking at David Weber’s book listing and seeing that there’s a new Honorverse ebook (maybe) that I might go and get, but I should be pretty safe for tonight on the reading front. Maybe. Unless I do get that ebook. Maybe I should wait…

Tour de Fleece is wrapping up, and though I’m not unhappy with what I’ve accomplished, it’s less than I would like. So tomorrow I’m going to try and fix what needs fixing, and then see where I’m at. Today I spun up the white for the final project, as I’d finished plying the brown yesterday, and gave them a wash and full.

Spun, plied, and ready to wash.
Spun, plied, and ready to wash.

I can confirm that some of the brown was unwashed wool, and I can also confirm that there’s a heck of a lot of lanolin in that white Corriedale, so much so that I think I need to give it another wash just to get the rest of it out before I start knitting with it. I hung them on the outside trellis to dry…

Best drying rack I have (in the summer when it isn't raining...).
Best drying rack I have (in the summer when it isn’t raining…).

…so I’ll check it here in a bit, but I’m thinking I should give it another hot soapy wash. I don’t think it needs another cold shock or full; I’m quite happy with how it plumped up, but I think it’s still a bit too greasy for me to be comfortable working with.

Lessons learned from this exercise: do woolen spinning with completely clean, scoured, lanolin-free wool. Yeah. Trust me on that one. It’s not fun.

2 comments on I should learn to slow down

  • Frazzlehead

    Oh dear. I’m like that with books too.

    This is one reason I like audiobooks – they slow me down a little, and I savour the content a bit more than when I read on my own. Once I get into a text, I stop subvocalizing and the words just … get into my brain directly (I didn’t realize this until I was reading some course material my dad had on speed reading and it was talking about how to avoid subvocalization and I was like, huh? you hear the words in your head??).

    I am listening to a David Weber book at the moment, in fact – the second of the Safehold series. A bit dragging at times, but still fun. Now you’ve got me thinking I want to listen to the Honor ones…

    ‘Cause, ya know, I need more books.

    Hey, have you read any Lois McMaster Bujold? Talk about books to keep you up reading!! I just re-listened to the entire Vorkosigan series: I love, love, love her writing. And her characters.

    Okay, now I have to go put my story back on… 🙂

    • Ness

      Oh, Miles. Yes, he’s another one I have to be careful with. 🙂

      Safehold is a pretty enjoyable series; it has a mix of sci fi and blue water that I really like. I just wish more happened in each book… I highly recommend the Honor Harrington series. The weakness of the last couple in the main series doesn’t detract from the strength of the first dozen, nor the side series either.

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