Monday, May 12, 2025

Weekly update: two finishes + reading

 

Two walks at Illinois Beach State Park this weekend were good for my body and my spirit.  

Woodland violet, field horsetail, wild strawberry, hoary puccoon, prickly pear, serviceberry, false Solomon's seal.

If you look at the horizon you can see the Chicago skyline, 40 miles away.


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In the studio:  two finishes!  



The flimsy was in my post last week.  Now it's quilted and bound.    One of my Rainbow Scrap Challenge projects this year is to make a wheelchair-sized quilt (approx. 40 x 50) out of Ohio Stars in the monthly color.



I signed up for the guild mystery quilt and made all the blocks.  I had fabric left from the "dust off a book" blog hop earlier in the year and used it with lavender that I had in quantity from an estate sale.   I chose this setting from the many that were suggested.  

The backing is all-one-piece from a wide back (thrift shop purchase).  

Blocks are 10" and the quilt is 60" x 80". 


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The poet and essayist Donald Hall was one of Stevens' favorite writers.  Last month I finally read String Too Short to Be Saved (review here).  


I read Without: Poems while sitting with Stevens in the hospital.   This slim volume is an elegy to Hall's wife, poet Jane Kenyon, from her cancer diagnosis through treatment, death, and the year afterward.  It is sad, fierce, and loving -- a tribute to Jane's life and work and to their marriage.  (She died in 1995 and the poems were published in 1998.)

"Always the weather / writing its book of the world / returns you to me . . . Your presence in this house / is almost as enormous / and painful as your absence . . ."  (p. 51)

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Then I turned to Life Work, an earlier collection of essays (1993).  A cancer diagnosis and subsequent successful surgery gave him pause.  In that pause he reflected on his career as a poet, writer, and intellectual. That life was in sharp contrast to his maternal grandparents, in whose farmhouse he lived (see String Too Short to Be saved) and his paternal grandfather and his father who owned a very successful dairy in Connecticut.  Hall respects the choices of his forebears and understands how that influenced what he became.  

There are more of Hall's books on Stevens' bookshelf and I look forward to reading them.  

Linking up with Design Wall Monday   Sew and Tell  Oh Scrap! Monday Musings  

9 comments:

  1. I like your OH stars in green. And your choice of layout for the mystery quilt reminds me of a kaleidoscope. Thanks for sharing in Sew & Tell. Continued prayers as you grieve. God bless.

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  2. nice green stars finish....oh solomon's seal...there was some in my yard...have to say the book reviews sound morose...might remind me too much of mom's bout with cancer so i'll stick to my whodunits for now...i hope they are giving you some solace and comfort....

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  3. How good for you to be able to enjoy one of Stevens favorite authors. It seems to me the words might be speaking directly to you. Hugs.

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  4. Lovely walk to flower-spot, Nann. Walking is so good for so many things...
    Great to read your Stevens' favorite poems and enjoy them....I hope they will warm your heart with
    memories...hugs, Julierose

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  5. The guild mystery quilt is fun, and so evocative of spring.

    Ceci

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  6. That is an amazing view all the way across the lake like that! Your guild mystery quilt is a neat layout - an optical illusion. Pretty colors, too. It sounds like Stevens has a very interesting book collection!

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  7. I see lots of wild woodland violets here too these days on my walks. Love both these quilts. Both those books appeal to me, lm going to look them up. Great post!

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  8. Very fun finishes. Love all the bright colors with that lavender back ground.

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  9. Two more great finishes. Nice to see the flowers from your walk too.

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