I’ve been knitting for 20 yrs but my output has gone way up in the last 2. Partly bc of being home more, not having babies who need constant hands-on attn anymore & I’ve noticed more and more that I consciously turn to it to soothe anxiety. Anyway here’s what I made in 2021:
2. This leopard print hat (pattern is called Cat Love). I’m pretty sure this one went to @bilgeyesil1
3. One of the best memes of the year inspired these Bernie Mittens. I raffled them off and @gwendolynb won, gifting them to @mariaelainemur
4. This Winter Lights Shawl that kept me company backstage at my first @Jeopardy taping. I’m pretty sure I raffled this but I now can’t remember the specifics or who won it (let me know if it’s you!)
5. This Mohairino Medley shawl that I worked on at my second Jeopardy taping. One of the few knits I’ve kept for myself
6. This Hiberknitting Hat. I also kept this one for me
7. This @PrincetonUPress color-coordinating neck-warmer that I sent to my super supportive editor when my book came out (pattern is called Scraptown Cowl)
8. I used the same yarn to make this Chevrollelogram scarf
9. This Rio Dress, made for @kwelkernbc’s new little one 👶🏻💕
10. This cowl (pattern is called Cowl at the Moon) requested by my grandfather-in-law. I got my kid to model it and I have no idea why she made this face 😆
11. This Palm Springs Cowl that I raffled off to raise funds for @NAPAWF. The winner was @JocStitt (I think?? My memory is so bad about these)
12. These mittens my kid insisted I make for her entirely out of season
13. This Zipper Scarf that resulted in personal injury because the stacked stitches were so finicky. I’m not ready to part with it yet but @LumpenData likes it so much I may leave it to him in my will 🤣
14. This Honey Seed Hat. I will probably give this one away in 2022.
15. This Flicker & Flame hat that accidentally ended up with a pleasing 70s ski vibe. I’ll probably give this one away eventually too.
16. This more muted version of the Flicker & Flame hat that I made for my MIL
17. This Plumpy shawl that languished on my shawl rack until @ltisdel requested to buy it for her mom for Christmas. Win-win.
18. This Painting Honeycombs hat that i made to match the cover of The Book Proposal Book 🤓
19. This Zig to the Zag scarf (the first try at a book cover match but the yarn turned out to be the wrong color blue after the book arrived). It ended up with @tcarmody’s mom
20. This Shawl Party shawl that I raffled off (@ltisdel won it)
21. This Vertices Unite Baby Blanket for a dear friend’s little one (not tagging bc I’m not sure if she’s announced on Twitter yet)
22. A Sunshine hat for the same little one (ultimately commandeered by the older sibling, fair’s fair)
23. This Parallelolamb shawl. It’s too scratchy for me (as usual) but coordinates with so many of my clothes that I’ve kept it for myself for now
If you’re looking for an exemplary book introduction, I suggest Kristina Wilson’s Mid-Century Modernism and the American Body: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Power in Design. Impeccably organized + states the book’s arguments & interventions so clearly. press.princeton.edu/books/hardcove…
(I’ve had nothing to do with this book. I just bought it for my own pleasure reading and happened to really appreciate the intro as a developmental editor)
The summary of chapters toward the end is a particularly wonderful model to follow, if you’re trying to figure out how to do this for your own intro chapter or your book proposal. Wilson tells us what each chapter’s argument is and the archive of evidence from which it’s built…
If you need to write a summary of a book chapter (you’ll definitely need to do this in your book proposal, you might also want to do it in your book’s introduction) here are the 6 elements I suggest including:
1. Working title of the chapter. If you’re at the proposal stage, don’t worry about the title changing later, it’s fine.
2. Topic of the chapter - a few words to answer the question “what’s this chapter about?”
3. The argument you make about the chapter’s topic, or if it’s more of a context/history chapter, what main point you want readers to understand. Don’t assume the chapter topic speaks for itself — ppl want to know *why* they should read the chapter & the arg tells them why
A really common piece of advice given to scholars when talking about their research (whether in a book proposal or other context) is to answer the "so what?" question. I kind of hate that formulation and here's why:
So many of the scholars I work with are writing abt the history & experiences of real people. Often they're people from communities that have been marginalized bc of racism, nationalism, etc. To read that scholar's book proposal and say "so what?" would be, IMO, deeply insulting
I try to force myself to find another way to get at the issue. It's not "so what?" because of course the information this scholar has uncovered and synthesized is important and matters to them and to a lot of other people too.
Waiting on peer reviews might be the most torturous part of publishing a scholarly book. Here are a few things you should know about them to prepare yourself if you’re waiting for yours to come in right now:
Your editor may or may not frame the reviews for you. Sometimes they do, sometimes they just send them. If at all possible, try to have a phone convo with your ed abt the reviews so you can get real talk on what they think of them and what they think is most impt to address
Remember that the reviewers don’t have the final say on anything. They make recommendations, not decisions. Your response—explaining how you’ll address criticisms if there are any—goes a long way in the publication decision (which, again, is not made by the reviewers)
The title “Editor” has become central to my professional identity over the past several years but I recently took it out of my bio on here bc I think I’m in a bit of an existential shift and focusing on other ways to support academic/scholarly authors, at least for right now
I think I’ll write a newsletter soon on the differences between editing, consulting, and coaching, and what you as an author might be looking for that would lead you to one of those types of helpers
I still do editing for many of my clients. But I think I want new people to understand that I can help in other ways. My old friends on here can still call me an editor ☺️