The Perfect Waiting Room Book, and a Few More
At my age I spend a lot of time in waiting rooms, accompanying someone who is having radiation/knee surgery/CAT scan etc. I keep a Hospital Tote Bag ready to go, and it contains:
- a very old Snuggie type wearable blanket because it’s always freezing in there
- ear buds to block out other people’s noise
- a change purse for the vending machine
- eye drops, lip balm, breath mints, etc.
- a list of medications for each person I may be accompanying
And of course some books. I prefer physical books normally, but there are ones I keep on my Kindle, so they are always ready to go with me.
It’s hard to find the sweet spot of reading material. There are so many interruptions, and I am already stressed enough being at the hospital, that I won’t have the attention span to follow plot twists in fiction, or to absorb new information from serious nonfiction. It can’t be a book that makes me want to get up and immediately start a new project, craft- or research-wise. What I need is something with short sections, on a topic I’m already familiar with.
For me the perfect book is A Stash of One’s Own: Knitters on Loving, Living with, and Letting Go of Yarn, an anthology edited by Clara Parkes.
Reading this book is like being surrounded by a group of undemanding friends, and listening as they relate their experiences with their craft — what initially sparked their interest, memories of their mentors and mentees, what they do when it is time to pass on some of their inventory. Absorbing their different accounts takes me away from the hospital waiting room and into a lovely cozy yarn shop.
The 23 contributors wrote from many different perspectives — sheep farmer, spinner, knitting designer, yarn reviewer, daughter of a famous knitter. Some of them have huge stashes requiring whole rooms, some just have a basket or two of yarn.
I’m not a knitter but it was easy to substitute the word “fabric” for every time this book mentioned “yarn”. 🙂
From Franklin Habit‘s chapter, Her Pretty String:
As my passion for knitting grew, I stashed yarns the way a nouveauriche billionaire collects art: rapidly, and with more enthusiasm than taste. I bought stout American wools from small American mills. I bought rich, exuberant colors from the emerging community of hand-dyers. I bought fine silk blend and dreamy imported alpaca. I also bought “rustic” farmers’ market wools so rough they wore a hole in the bottom of my shopping bag and cheap, gaudy Chinese acrylics that squeaked across my needles like angry mice. It was all yarn to me, and I wanted all the yarn.
From Jillian Moreno‘s chapter, Spinning Stash:
I am unapologetic about the size of my stash. It keeps me grounded. In it I see possibility and the comfort of abundance. It is a reflection of me on a deep level. It’s also filled with connections. Not just the stories of what happened and who I was with when I bought a particular braid of fiber, but also the stories of the fiber and where it came from. The closer you get to the source, the closer you get to the people.
… A big stash allows me to have a fluid sense of creativity — a looseness that is very much like playing. It opens me up, unlocks things. The creative bit takes all the other pieces — the possibility, the abundance, the connections, and the actual work of making yarn — bundles them, and explodes like a glitter bomb. It gets everywhere, it makes me smile, and I can’t escape it.
I have reread this book several times. I always find it comforting.
And in case the waiting time really stretches out, I would also recommend these books for back-up:
- Knitlandia: A Knitter Sees the World, also by Clara Parkes. I wrote a short review here.
- Costume Design by Deborah Nadoolman Landis. I own three wonderful books by this author — the other two are gigantic coffee table books, but I have this one in Kindle format so I can always carry a costume book with me! The only drawback to this book is that I want to immediately sit and watch all the films each designer worked on.
- and Vanishing Fleece, also by Clara Parkes. The author bought an entire year’s wool clip from a small sheep farm, and then followed the wool through all the steps of being processed, in various small businesses across the country. I am in awe of her ability to describe complicated equipment in a way that makes it more understandable than diagrams would. I have the audio book version, and Clara’s voice is easy to listen to.
Of course all of these books are worth reading at any time! I just save them for those situations when other books won’t do, and it is a comfort to me to know I am prepared. 🙂















Thank you for posting this. I have two daughters who spin, knit, and crochet, and these books would be perfect gifts for them.
Oh good! I think they are enjoyable for all levels of crafters. 🙂
Woof, that was incredible! Something for every situation. I found myself thinking I could have all these things here for me and never leave ‘my’ waiting room LOL
Good job you.
Thistle be a beautiful day!
While there is tea there is hope!
That sounds like a wonderful book and you could definitely substitute “fabric” for yarn! I am impressed with your ready to go and well stocked hospital waiting room bag!
Thanks, Tierney! I should make and use a creative bag like the kind you make — that would brighten up the waiting room! 🙂
Typically, I’d be the one in hospital, waiting and waiting for some kind of action. I learned to bring my Kindle, loaded with the next book in a series I enjoyed, and a quilt I’d made for familiarity and comfort. Also a large bottle of water for afterwards, since they always want you to drink loads to compensate for the Nil By Mouth part, and hospital water is always disgusting. And finally, my phone, so that I can ask a kind friend to serve up the tea on something, to keep me distracted and entertained. But I like your selection too!
Yes, thank goodness for Kindles! I can have so many books on it that I can dip into whatever I am in the mood for. And also thank goodness for phones, it is so easy to keep everyone updated.
Wow! I’m impressed with your preparedness, and I can’t help but think back to the times I took Mom to her various appointments at Kaiser with my two year old in tow; similar idea but child-focused. Your book recommendations are well written and enticing. I worked in a costume shop many moons ago, so I had better check that out.
I am grateful every day that I am only doing elder care, and not trying to simultaneously raise kids and hold down a job, like so many people have to do. I can’t imagine trying to keep a kid happy in those waiting rooms, that must have been quite a feat!
I’m very impressed by your organisation. I usually take actual knitting to waiting rooms as it’s very portable but sometimes I don’t have anything in progress. I recently saw a wonderful you tube video called – Behind the Seams of New York City Ballet’s ‘The Nutcracker’ | Making It | WWD – so I was very interested in your costume book but, here, it seems to be £157! So I will look out for the yarn books 🙂
I saw that same YouTube, and last year I bought the biography of Karinska, the costume designer! I am going to do a post on her soon.
I don’t know if you do e-books, but I have the Kindle version of that costume book and it is only $3.99. I wish I understood the pricing of old books — it seems the ones I want are always set at over $75, but the ones I have gotten at auctions and have multiple copies of, are always offered for only $1 or so.
What a beautiful post.
Like you I have my hospital bag but it is my kindle which keeps me going.
Thank you for another book on costume design. I am looking forward to adding it to my collection.
Have a delightful day.
Nóilín paperpenandmug
I agree, if I had to only bring one thing, it would be my Kindle! I love having multiple books with me. 🙂
A waiting room bag is a great idea, whether it’s waiting for my appointment or someone else’s!
Years ago I spent a lot of time in waiting rooms and took crochet lace to work on – small enough to carry around and no worries about stopping suddenly and losing stitches or my place.
That is a craft I would like to learn!
I think crochet is easier to learn than knitting and once you can crochet with wool using fine cotton is just a bit more fiddly.