Knit Two, Kate Jacobs ~ Win a free copy of FIVE!

Win One of FIVE Copies of Knit Two

Knit_Two_by_Kate_JacobsWarning: This is a pretty huge post on Knit Two with a Q&A with Kate Jacobs and a wonderful guest book review from Bonnie from Red Lady’s Reading Room.  

TO ENTER TO WIN KNIT TWO:

  • Subscribe to my e-newsletter for one ballot AND

  • Leave a Comment Below to be counted with 2 ballots, AND

  • Call 206–309–7318 and leave a voice mail message I can play on air and be counted with 3 ballots

As some of you may know, Kate Jacob does call-ins to bookclubs all across the country, so if you’re in a bookclub (or know of friends who are), you can sign up to invite Kate to your meeting HERE.

And Kate’s running a contest where she’ll visit your bookclub in person. Sign up HERE

A Conversation with Kate Jacobs

Carrie:  Did you think you’d write a sequel as soon as you finished The Friday Night Knitting Club, or did that decision come later?

Kate:  I was exhausted right after finishing The Friday Night Knitting Club! It was my first novel and I was ready for a good, long nap after all that writing! Though, in all seriousness, I had some other characters rumbling around in my brain and their stories deserved telling. So I wrote Comfort Food. That said, I always had a future mapped out for the members of the knitting club, and, after hearing from so many fans who were eager to know what happens, it didn’t seem fair to just keep it all to myself. Writing this sequel was truly a joy, and I’m excited to share the new book with readers.

Carrie:  Without giving too much away, are there things that will surprise readers in KNIT TWO?Kate Jacobs

Kate:  KNIT TWO is set about five years after the first book, and all of the characters are older and, in some cases, more mature. Dakota is in college now. Though just because we get older doesn’t always make us wiser! There are new friendships between the characters, folks who didn’t know each other as well in the original, and overall the sequel is much more upbeat than the ending of the first book.

Carrie:  Which character do you identify with most strongly? How much of yourself did you put into these characters?

Kate:  Well, I really love all the characters – I forgive them all their flaws and mistakes. I identify with many of the struggles the characters have, to some degree, but that is something many women could say. Issues about career, about getting married, about mapping out our lives (and learning how quickly things can go off-road). I’m there in the book, and then again I’m not there. Sometimes I put personal things in quite consciously – I did that more with Comfort Food, in which the best friend has the same last name as my best friend, for example. Other times, little bits of me just seep into the characters, and it could be a favorite food they have or a pet peeve. But I tend not to write one fully developed character who is a stand-in for me – that would be too revealing!

Carrie:  To what extent are the characters based on your own circle of family and friends?

Kate:  In The Friday Night Knitting Club, I could point to Georgia’s Gran and the similarities with my own grandmother, who was a great knitter, great baker, and great lady. And so opinionated! Or I could share that when I was a little kid, I loved to bake – as Dakota does – and then when I was a teenager I was so like Darwin, who is suspicious of everything domestic. In KNIT TWO, the characters have all continued to grow and change, and Gran is mostly off-page in Scotland. So they’re all moving beyond these similarities and truly becoming themselves.

Carrie:  Your characters are of different races, religions, and economic backgrounds, but their friendship mostly transcends those factors.  That said, Dakota, Georgia’s daughter, has to confront some issues related to her biracial background.  So what does all this say about the way these kinds of differences affect friendships between women in the real world?

Kate:  My personal world is made up of friends and family who are different from me – and so I think it’s important that the group in the novel be multiracial, multigenerational, and have different religions and sizes of bank accounts. That’s real. Because at our core, regardless of differences, I think we all share similar desires for community and connection. We want to love and be loved. And, like the women in KNIT TWO, most of our conversations revolve around what we’re dealing with in any given moment, whether it’s something about our work or our family. In other words, our struggles and similarities form the basis for our friendships. That said, differences do remain. It’s important to be honest about them, not to pretend they don’t exist. It is very difficult to ever fully comprehend another person’s struggles when we cannot personally relate, when we haven’t walked in their shoes. That’s why compassion is such a crucial element in a relationship. And why I try to bring compassion to writing honestly in my novels.

Carrie:  KNIT TWO is primarily a story of friendships between women, like The Friday Night Knitting Club, but you also include some significant male characters, and there’s one particularly close but platonic male-female friendship.  Women’s friendships are certainly special, but can men join the circle, too, maybe as associate members?

Kate:  Of course men can join! And it’s not just characters. Over the past year, I’ve heard from a handful of men who’ve read the book, and that’s been a delight. Personally, my husband is my best friend, and many women I know have important men in their lives. It seemed only appropriate that men have a place in the novel, and developing the platonic friendship was a way to show a male character in more than just the role of the love interest.

Carrie:  What is it about knitting that makes it so popular right now, both traditional and hip at the same time?

Kate:  Knitting is a lot of things all wrapped up in a ball of yarn. It’s memory of good old days and sweet grandmothers. It can be an assertion of personality, of irony, of creativity. It can be a luxurious indulgence using the fanciest materials, and it can be a budget-minded holiday scarf using yarn on sale. You can knit all alone, or you can find a group and knit with them.  Knitting has the flexibility to meet our needs for a creative and emotional outlet, and it has a very soothing rhythm. It nurtures, and I think that’s a very good thing in times of uncertainty.

Carrie:  How’s your own knitting going?  When do you find time for it?

Kate:  I have so many half-finished projects it is becoming ridiculous! Our guest room has turned into a stash room, which is good for me but crowded for guests. I’ve moved into my afghan phase – well, it’s more about throws I can make in one piece – and that’s all I want to knit lately. The only hiccup – and it’s a good problem to have – is that I’m so busy writing, talking to book clubs, going on tour, and so on that I only have time for a few rows here or there. However, knitting on large needles has really helped stretch out my wrists, which can become stressed after being perched on the keyboard all day. So now I have an excuse to sneak in a little knitting!

Carrie:  The Friday Night Knitting Club was extremely popular with reading groups, and you spoke to many of them by phone.  Will you do the same thing for KNIT TWO?

Kate:  Absolutely!  I talk to about 40 clubs every month. It’s good fun.  The telephone call-ins started when a group from Minnesota invited me to chat with them during their meeting. I was nervous but I ended up having such a good time that I blogged about the experience at www.katejacobs.com.  Suddenly, I had more invitations, and that’s when I decided to put a button on my website. Now I talk to clubs any day of the week.  I’ve talked to clubs from the back of a cab, standing in a line for missing luggage at the airport, driving a rental car on a visit home to see my parents. (I had a headset so I was driving hands free!) Setting up the calls is easy: A member of a group just needs to send me the date & time of their club’s get-together and if I can fit it in, I will!

Carrie:  A big part of KNIT TWO takes place in Italy.  Did you travel there on research?  How tough a trip was that?

Kate:  Oh, terribly difficult, trying to figure out how to eat everything and see everything! No, it was delightful, of course, every day filled with new discoveries. My husband was with me and we both love history and walking and hearty dishes of pasta, so it was a perfect trip for us. We learned a lot, I would say, as do the characters in KNIT TWO. Isn’t it funny how sometimes we have to go somewhere else to see what we already know?

Carrie:  Food plays an important role in both The Friday Night Knitting Club and KNIT TWO.  You’ve also written a novel about a cooking show called Comfort Food.  Are knitting and friendship and food all intimately connected with one another?  Is that why you include both knitting instructions and recipes at the end of KNIT TWO?

Kate: Well, food keeps us going, after all. I write often about characters trying to nourish themselves, typically in an emotional sense but also in a physical sense. And whereas cooking is an important part of many characters’ lives in Comfort Food, baking is significant to one member of the Friday Night Knitting Club. I know sometimes kids change their ideas of what they want to do multiple times, but I always knew what I wanted to do. So does Dakota. As for the pattern and recipes, it can be fun to have little extras in a book. Not to mention that almost every book club I speak with has made Dakota’s muffins from The Friday Night Knitting Club, so I thought they needed a new recipe to try!

Carrie:  New York City — the Upper West Side of Manhattan, to be specific – is almost another character in the book.  You grew up in western Canada, lived in New York for a long time, and now live in Los Angeles.  But New York continues to have a hold on your imagination.  Why?

Kate:  That’s something I’ve thought about very often, in fact. You know, I didn’t like New York very much when I initially moved there. Too loud, too busy. It didn’t feel like my place. But a couple of things happened. For one thing, I made a great group of friends – we used to always get together on Tuesday nights (and no, we didn’t knit!) – and that helped make New York feel more like a community. For another, I met the man who became my husband, and he grew up just outside the city. But I suppose also the mix of having my first apartment, my first job, becoming an adult, all happened in New York. And being in the city on 9/11 solidifies a connection, that’s for sure. While I do love California – the weather is amazing, the people friendly – right now I feel that I understand, in an intimate way, small-town Canada and urban Manhattan. And I don’t think I’ll ever be done exploring the lives of New Yorkers.  Frankly, I think of myself as a Canadian-born New Yorker who just happens to live on the West Coast. As I say in my books, it’s all about defining yourself as you want to be.

Carrie:  Do you have a website where readers can get in touch with you and learn more about your books?

Kate:  I am always reachable at www.katejacobs.com.  I check my own email, typically daily, and love to hear from readers. I get a kick out of emails that begin with “Please tell Kate…”  It’s me! Plus the website has a list of my tour events, a blog and all the relevant news about the books, including first chapter excerpts and reading guides. In addition, I post almost every interview or podcast I do, so there is a lot of material to find out more.

Carrie:  Are you working on a new book now?

Kate: I’ve been asked this question often lately – which I suppose is a good thing! Yes, I am happily working on a new book already. There are a lot of stories I want to tell. But I’m a bit particular about not talking about what I’m writing until it’s quite far along. So you won’t get any details yet!

Carrie:  What is the core message of KNIT TWO? What do you hope readers take away from it?

Kate:  The Friday Night Knitting Club was about forgiveness, about getting beyond regret and moving forward. It was also about becoming independent and learning to live on one’s own terms, as well as this idea of how important it is to have strong female friendships, and to recognize and honor those relationships.  KNIT TWO is about the power of legacy, about how we hold on so tightly because we’re afraid to let go – and how sometimes the letting go allows us to keep a better hold on things in the long run. This story is about falling into patterns and figuring out if and when it’s time to break those patterns. About when it’s time for acceptance and when it’s time to be courageous and be bold. It’s about the idea that success is a journey, not a sprint, and that the answers for one moment in our lives may not be the answers for another. Ultimately, KNIT TWO is a novel about hope.


Guest Book Review from Bonnie from Red Lady’s Reading Room

I was thrilled to hear that  there would be a sequel to one of my favorite books, The Friday Night Knitting Club. Reading Knit Two felt  like I was catching up with old friends. It was familiar and comfortable, and as you do with good friends, you pick up right where you left off.  As with friends you may not see for awhile,  some things do change. In Knit Two, time has passed and it has been 5 years since Georgia died.  Dakota, her daughter, is now 18 years old and in college and struggling to find her way. She has the wonderful guidance of the Knitting Club to support her as well as her father, James. Actually, most of the characters are trying to find their way through issues in their lives. I believe, that is why it is so easy to connect to this story and it’s characters. Peri is continuing with her pocket book business and running Walker & Daughter and trying to figure out how to manage both and where her future lies. Darwin is dealing with issues in her marriage and family while trying to find the  balance with her feminist side.  Lucie is dealing with managing her life as a single mother, businesswoman and her mothers needs. KC was more in the background as a quiet strength and her character grew in different ways. Anita is still the mother hen of the group and she had a major role in the story dealing with her own family issues, giving motherly advice and support to Dakota, and learning to find her own strength as a woman.  Catharine  learned to deal with finding her way as a single woman and issue with male and female relationships. I feel that the story flowed very smoothly and addressed each of the characters and their lives. It even delved a bit more into the men’s lives…James, Marty and some newer characters. I liked how the book was divided into sections separating them by  anecdotes about knitting. I looked forward to reading these sections as I found them written with great wisdom in relating Knitting to life. I have to say that I really missed Georgia while reading the book.  The ladies did honor her memory and her spirit, although you could feel the loss that they felt in their own lives.  I am a newbie knitter and would certainly love to find a wonderful group of women like these to have a firm bond of friendship with. Knit Two will be available on November 25th and this is must reading for those who have read The Friday Night Knitting Club. I hope that Kate Jacobs will be writing another book to add to this wonderful series about knitting and women’s friendships. 

  • Read the First Chapter of Knit Two HERE

There Are 57 Responses So Far. »

  1. Fantastic interview! I would love to be entered.

  2. REALLY great interview. One of my favorites for sure! I would love to stuff this book into my own stocking this year — maybe some knitting needles and yarn too.

  3. Everyone is saying how wonderful this book is!

  4. Wonderful, interesting interview. I look forward to reading the book.

  5. Hello, I really like reading books about women and their relationships! The multicultural aspect adds more interesting factors to the book. Please enter me in your marvelous book drawing.
    Many thanks…..Cindi

  6. Excellent content and style…keep up the good work!

  7. Terrific interview. I’m curious about the book!

  8. I’d love a chance to win this book!

  9. Great interview and review. I’d love to win a copy of the book. I also signed up for the newsletter : )

  10. Interesting interview with Ms. Jacobs. RedLady’s review was very well-written and just whets my appetite for KNIT TWO!

  11. Hey, Carrie. I came to you via Redlady’s Reading Room; there’s no need to enter me. I just wanted you to know that I took the liberty of posting about this at my Win a Book blog. Hope it helps you find some new readers.

  12. I thoroughly enjoyed your interview with Kate Jacobs. She is gracious, multi-talented, and unafraid of tackling tough themes in a delightful way.

  13. Great interview! Looking forward to reading the book! Thanks!

  14. I’d love to win this book. I already read the Friday Night Knitting Club and I am looking forward to this book, especially because it is set in the future. I think that will make it a really interesting read, giving this book a new perspective.

  15. Great interview. I would love to win this book. Thanks for the contest:)

  16. I am so looking forward to reading this book. FNKC changed my life. After reading this wonderful story I wanted to learn to knit. So, I signed up for classes and owe it all to Kate. Please enter me in the giveaway. My on-line book club will be reading in January and would love to own a copy. Thank you.

    Vicki

  17. This book sounds like an awesome read, thanks so much for sharing

    please enter me as I would love to read it.

    carolyn s

    ceashark at aol dot com

  18. I am so excited for this book to be released …. Our book club has already scheduled a chat with Kate in February and I would love to win a copy to add to the excitment. Thought Friday Night Knitting Club was the best book I have read so far that is about a knitting group. Can hardly wait !

    Gabbigail

  19. I recently took up knitting because of the ‘Friday Night Knitting Club’ and would love to read this book. Please accept this as my submission. Thank you!

  20. Wow this is a big post! Okay I am commenting…I have wanted to read this book for a while now it has received many good reviews. (1)
    I signed up for your newsletter (2)
    I’d call you, yet all I’d say is “PICK ME”! ; )
    Thanks
    Darby
    darbyscloset at yahoo dot com

  21. I was so happy to see that she wrote a sequel!! Great interview!

  22. Great interview. I would love to have this book!
    thanks

  23. The interview was great! I’d love to win the book. I was so excited that she had written a sequel. FNKC was such a good book and really made me think about my group of friends. I just signed up for the newsletter too!

  24. Wow! That was a great interview! The two of you had such an interesting conversation. I love to hear how author’s write. I can’t wait to read this book. I love to knit but scarves are about as ambitious as I get. I have fun though. I happily subscribed to your newsletter. I was thrilled to find your site and I look forward to visiting more. Thanks for your contest!

  25. I loved the first book and would LOVE to win the sequel! Great interview! Thanks for the information.

  26. Great interview. Please enter me in the contest. Thanks.

    avalonne83 [at] yahoo [dot] it

  27. I love reading your reviews. I get scared somethines I’ll run out of books that wil interest me, and then I come upon your reviews such as this one, and not only do I find one but it leads me to others… Thanks Carrie

  28. I would love to be entered into the contest. Just found out about your website and podcast and funny enough Kate Jacob’s first book was just our bookclub book last month! So excited to see she has a sequel to it. Looking forward to looking further into your website!

  29. What a wonderful in-depth interview! I’d love to be entered to win this book :)

    Thanks!

  30. Can’t wait to read this book!! I read Friday Night Knitting Club earlier this year. Great interview!

  31. I loved the first book and would love to read this one! I’ve also subscribed to the newsletter.

  32. Loved your interview! Our bookclub read the first and I can’t wait to read her sequel. Thanks

  33. I would love to win this! Thanks for the chance!

  34. I would love to win a copy of this book! Thanks for hosting!

  35. Great interview! I would love to win this.

  36. Excellent Interview would love to win this prize. I also subscribe to your newsletter and read it all the time it is great.

  37. Fantastic interview. I would love to win this book!! This is on my list of books to read! :)

  38. I loved the book.. I don’t read much, I do love your site. I am reading more now.. This book was pretty good. Thanks Carrie!

  39. Carrie, I don’t have time to read all of the books you recommend especially after hearing about and from the authors!!!

  40. I’m a subscriber.

    I’d love to read this book. Haven’t read the first on yet, but I have it on my TBR. It sounds like a great read.

  41. Wonderful Interview! I think it is so great getting to know authors a little better :) I am a subscriber and would love to be entered :) Thank you!

  42. Fabulous interview and this sounds like a awesomw read. Count me in

  43. Please enter me into the drawing for this very interesting sounding book! I subscribe too.

  44. I loved the “Friday Night Knitting Club”! Not only was it a great read but actually encouraged me to hunt out a knitting class in my own area. I can’t wait to read “Knit Two”

  45. Carrie,

    This interview makes me regret, even more, that I didn’t read the first book yet. Now, I could read both!

    Here’s to the next Escape!
    Kristin

  46. I read and liked FNKC and look forward to reading this novel as well. Great interview!

  47. Thanks for the great interview. I will read this book whether I win a copy or not!

  48. I loved to read this book along with the one that comes before this one, “The Friday Night Knit Club”.
    Thanks for the interview and the offer to chat with our book clubs!
    Darby
    darbyscloset at yahoo dot com

  49. 1. I’m a subscriber
    2. I’d love to win a copy of KNIT TWO
    3. I’ve left a voice mail

  50. Hey! I would love to be entered. Plus, I signed up for the e-letter!

    Thanks so much!

    -Emily Jane
    neuemilyjane2@verizon.net

  51. I would love to win a copy of Knit Two. It sounds really good! Thank you!
    mittens0831 AT aol.com

  52. I’m a subscriber.
    mittens0831 AT aol.com

  53. The first book was excellent! Thanks for the interview!

  54. I am hearing more and more about this book and would love to win it so I can read it. The interview is great, enjoyed it very much. Thanks

  55. I’m new to this site and am totally interested in what you have written and reported. I was looking at the NYT best seller list and saw that “Knit Two” is one of the most popular. That led me to search for more info about it and finally to your blog. I am a long time knitter, having started at age 9, and still have so many projects in progress or imagined in my head. I felt included as I read FNKC and am impatient to get the sequel. Please enter me in your contest…how nice of you to do it.

  56. My book club read Friday Night Knit Club two months ago and are excited to read Knit Two in January. Thanks for the interview, I’m sharing it with the ladies!

  57. After reading the first chapter, my interest is piqued and would love to win this book. This sequel seems to have a perfect set-up in its first chapter to make the reader want more.
    I hope to read this book soon.

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