I don’t know when it changed but I’m addicted to the public library. The library went forgotten for a long time for me. It could have been that I was so used to being in the University library that I lost sight of the marvelous world of public libraries. Or that, when I was in high school a friend of mine worked at the public library putting away books. She would tell me gross stories of how she would find Kama Sutra books in the washrooms and that she was constantly washing her hands in fear of pervert cooties infecting the books.

Although the University library holds many treasures, they mostly hold journals, periodicals and text books that are not exactly comfort reading (can I use the term ‘comfort reading’?I suppose reading is a form of nourishment and for some I’m sure it gives a similar warm sense in your core to when you finish eight of Baba’s cheddar onion perogies with a thick dill sauce and a very large glass of red wine… tangent, carrying on.)
Needless to say, the public library does it for me. They always have what I’m looking for to quench my creative spurts. Recently I found this book.
As some of you have noticed, I’m addicted to knitting, so when I find patterns or books as inspirational as this one I have to write about it. The author, Wenlan Chia, knows exactly what I’m looking for in a pattern book. Nothing fancy or too complicated, nothing intricate or time consuming and something that I want to keep knitting through the night. This is very much an instant gratification knitting book. And what makes this book even better is that it came from the public library! I didn’t have to pay $18 to get a peek, I just went to my local libary website, logged into my account, ordered the book and when it was in, the nice automated lady from the library called and left a pleasant message to say that my book was in. Gone are the days of finding call numbers in roll-a-dex catalogues, simply type “knitting” into the library search engine from home and request as many merry books as your heart desires. Keep in mind, there are late fees, respect the service, don’t get cheap with the local library. Merci, a bientot!





