Four lives knit together…
There’s a little yarn store in Seattle called A Good Yarn. It’s owned by Lydia Hoffman, and it represents her dream of a new beginning, a life free from cancer. A life that offers a chance at love…
Lydia teaches knitting to beginners, and the first class is How to Make a Baby Blanket. Three women join. Jacqueline Donovan disapproves of the woman married to her only son, but knitting a baby blanket would be a gesture of reconciliation.
For Carol Girard, the baby blanket brings a message of hope as she and her husband make a final attempt to conceive.
And tough-looking Alix Townsend (that’s Alix with an i) is learning to knit her blanket for a court-ordered community service project.
These four very different women, brought together by the age-old craft of knitting, make unexpected discoveries-about themselves and each other. Discoveries that lead to friendship and acceptance, to laughter and dreams. Discoveries only women can share…
“The yarn forms the stitches, the knitting forges the friendships, the craft links the generations.”
—Karen Alfke, “Unpattern” designer and knitting instructor
LYDIA HOFFMAN
The first time I saw the empty store on Blossom Street I thought of my father. It reminded me so much of the bicycle shop he had when I was a kid. Even the large display windows, shaded by a colorful striped awning, were the same. Outside my dad’s shop, there were flower boxes full of red blossoms—impatiens—that spilled over beneath the large windows. That was Mom’s contribution: impatiens in the spring and summer, chrysanthemums in the fall and shiny green mistletoe at Christmas. I plan to have flowers, too.
Dad’s business grew steadily and he moved into increasingly larger premises, but I always loved his first store best.
I must have astounded the rental agent who was showing me the property. She’d barely unlocked the front door when I announced, “I’ll take it.”
She turned to face me, her expression blank as if she wasn’t sure she’d heard me correctly. “Wouldn’t you like to see the place? You do realize there’s a small apartment above the shop that comes with it, don’t you?”
“Yes, you mentioned that earlier.” The apartment worked perfectly for me. My cat, Whiskers, and I were in need of a home.
“You would like to see the place before you sign the papers, wouldn’t you?” she persisted.
I smiled and nodded. But it wasn’t really necessary; instinctively I knew this was the ideal location for my yarn shop. And for me.
The one drawback was that this Seattle neighborhood was undergoing extensive renovations and, because of the construction mess, Blossom Street was closed at one end, with only local traffic allowed. The brick building across the street, which had once been a three-story bank, was being transformed into high-end condos. Several other buildings, including an old warehouse, were also in the process of becoming condos. The architect had somehow managed to maintain the traditional feel of the original places, and that delighted me. Construction would continue for months, but it did mean that my rent was reasonable, at least for now.
I knew the first six months would be difficult. They are for any small business. The constant construction might create more obstacles than there otherwise would have been; nevertheless, I loved the space. It was everything I wanted.
Early Friday morning, a week after viewing the property, I signed my name, Lydia Hoffman, to the two-year lease. I was handed the keys and a copy of the rental agreement. I moved into my new home that very day as excited as I can remember being about anything. I felt as if I was just starting my life and in more ways than I care to count, I actually was.
I opened A Good Yarn on the last Tuesday in April. I felt a sense of pride and anticipation as I stood in the middle of my store, surveying the colors that surrounded me. I could only imagine what my sister would say when she learned I’d gone through with this. I hadn’t asked her advice because I already knew what Margaret’s response would be. She isn’t—to put it mildly—the encouraging type.
I’d found a carpenter who’d built some cubicles for me, three rows of them, painted a pristine white. Most of the yarn had arrived on Friday and I’d spent the weekend sorting it by weight and color and arranging it neatly in the cubicles. I’d bought a secondhand cash register, refinished the counter and set up racks of knitting supplies. I was ready for business.
This should have been a happy moment for me but instead, I found myself struggling to hold back tears. Dad would’ve been so pleased if he could have seen what I’d done. He’d been my support and my source of strength, my guiding light. I was so shocked when he died.
You see, I’d always assumed I would die before my father.
Most people find talk of death unsettling, but I’ve lived with the threat of it for so long, it doesn’t have that effect on me.The possibility of death has been my reality for the last fourteen years, and I’m as comfortable talking about it as I am the weather. Read more
1. While the main characters come from very different walks of life, they meet regularly and have a common interest (knitting). Have you ever been in a similar reading/discussion/hobby group? What did you get out of it?
2. Of the four main characters—Lydia, Jacqueline, Carol and Alix—is there one that particularly captured your imagination? Why?
3. Taking each main character in turn, decide on 3-4 adjectives that most aptly describe that person (example: courageous, angry, wimpy, disappointed, etc.). How do they manifest these characteristics? How do you feel about these people?
4. Discuss the relationship between Jacqueline and Tammie Lee, her unconventional daughter-in-law. Is her changing opinion reflective of other things happening in Jacqueline’s life, or does it cause things to happen?
5. When Tammie Lee tells Jacqueline the uncle Bubba story (page 305), she ends with the advice that “the power is yours, and you can use it as you wish.” What do you think of Jacqueline’s solution? Could you have done it?
6. Jacqueline and Reese each made critical decisions 10 years ago (after Reese’s affair) that radically affected their lives, together and separately. If you were in a similar situation with your spouse (if you are single, imagine yourself married), how would you handle it? What do you think of their decisions/actions?
7. By the end of the book, the main characters’ lives are transformed by the power of love. Discuss how this happens in each instance. Can you share similar examples you have seen in the lives of people around you?
8. Might the stories have created a different impression if they’d been told from the man’s point of view? How do you think the men in these pairings would have described their lives at the beginning of the story—and at the end? (Jordon/Alix, Doug/Carol, Reese/Jacqueline, Brad/Lydia.)
9. Alix starts the knitting class at A Good Yarn initially as a way to satisfy court-ordered community service hours, but she winds up being mentored by the other women to varying degrees, and particularly by Lydia. Have you ever mentored anyone in anything? What benefits does mentoring give the mentor as well as the person mentored?
10. The many benefits and pleasures of knitting are revealed in quotations that open a number of chapters. Did this help your understanding of the book? Is knitting a metaphor for anything? (A metaphor is a word or action that stands for something else, or adds additional meaning or nuance to it.) Do you knit and if so, what does it mean to you?
11. The author uses multiple voices to tell the stories. How did this narrative device affect your appreciation of the book? Did it affect the way you read the book?
12. The relationship between Lydia and her sister, Margaret, changes dramatically. Discuss their relationship. Why do you think Margaret behaves the way she does? Do you know anyone like her?
13. What did you think of the means by which Doug and Carol eventually adopt a baby? Were the circumstances believable to you?
14. Lydia’s reasons for opening a yarn store were daring, considering her circumstances and recent illnesses. If you were in her position, financial and emotional, what might you do? Do you have a dream you haven’t been able to act upon?
15. What is the most important thing you want to get out of reading a book? Did this book satisfy that need?
"Four women brought together by their interest in knitting makes for an interesting read by bestselling novelist Debbie Macomber. . . . The Shop on Blossom Street shows the author's understanding of the heart of a woman." -The Sunday Oklahoman
"Macomber is an adept storyteller...many will be entertained by this well-paced story about four women finding happiness and fulfillment through their growing friendship. - Publishers Weekly
To Linda Johnson for sharing her love of knitting with me. To Laura Early for taking me under her wing. And to Lisa, who touched my heart in her desire for a child.
