Lorelie L. (artgal36) reviewed on + 471 more book reviews
A wonderful sequel to The Shop on Blossom Street. I loved this one too.
Lydia Hoffman owns the shop on Blossom Street. In the year since it opened, A Good Yarn has thrived, and so has Lydia. A lot of that is due to Brad Goetz. But when Brad's ex-wife reappears, Lydia is suddenly afraid to trust her newfound happiness.
Three women join Lydia's newest class. Elise Beaumont, retired and bitterly divorced, learns that her onetime husband is reentering her life. Bethanne Hamlin is facing the fallout from a much more recent divorce. And Courtney Pulanski is a depressed and overweight teenager, whose grandmother's idea of helping her is to drag her to senior's swim sessions-and to the knitting class at A Good Yarn.
And soon an unbreakable bond is formed among the knitters in this poignant story of real women with real problems becoming real friends. I loved it.
Lydia Hoffman owns the shop on Blossom Street. In the year since it opened, A Good Yarn has thrived, and so has Lydia. A lot of that is due to Brad Goetz. But when Brad's ex-wife reappears, Lydia is suddenly afraid to trust her newfound happiness.
Three women join Lydia's newest class. Elise Beaumont, retired and bitterly divorced, learns that her onetime husband is reentering her life. Bethanne Hamlin is facing the fallout from a much more recent divorce. And Courtney Pulanski is a depressed and overweight teenager, whose grandmother's idea of helping her is to drag her to senior's swim sessions-and to the knitting class at A Good Yarn.
And soon an unbreakable bond is formed among the knitters in this poignant story of real women with real problems becoming real friends. I loved it.
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