Barbara Walker studied journalism at the University of Pennsylvania and then took a reporting job at the Washington Star in DC. During her work as a reporter, she became increasingly interested in feminism and women's issues.
Her writing career has been split between knitting instruction books, produced in the late 1960s through the mid-80s; and women's studies and mythology books, produced from the 1980s through the early 21st C.
Barbara Walker's classic book provides an exhaustive library of stitch patterns that deserve a five star rating for the research and volume of knowledge. However, the publisher/editor got points taken off for spliting crucial information up on different pages, often not even on a facing page, but rather on the back. Whoever edited this book was not a knitter or the would understand the importance of keeping a pattern on the same page. White space in this case is a good thing. I also wish I had gotten this in a digital format because the glossery of stitches is way in the front of the book, so you are constantly having to flip back and forth unless you have a photographic memory. Next, the some of the images are flipped (thus not matching the written instructions).
If this book had not been a requirement for a class, I would have checked it out from the library.
SO I'm not done *knitting* this yet but I've read it and the instructions/descriptions are clear enough that I could learn to CABLE without having to YouTube it. Amazing. Clearest instructions. Awesome book that is a great bridge to becoming an intermediate/advanced knitter.
I ordered the Learn‑to‑Knit Afghan Book back when I was still figuring out how to knit—and it ended up being a surprisingly solid companion. Barbara Walker doesn't just give you patterns; she explains how they work, which felt like getting knitting advice from someone who really understands what beginners struggle with.
I'll admit: there were moments I wanted to toss it aside in frustration. But Walker’s clear, steady guidance pulled me through. It wasn’t about fancy techniques—it was about taking one stitch at a time and actually feeling like a knitter.
If want something that’s comforting and clear, that helps you try new stitches without feeling lost—I think you’ll appreciate this book as much as I did.
I'm up to square 19 out of 63 from this book (as of June 2009). I'm spinning the yarn for it as I go, so it's taken me 3 years to get this far (OK, I had a baby since I started it, too, so that really slowed me down). I'm enjoying working through this book so far.
Great book for beginning knitters to learn a variety of knit stitches and techniques in a simple way on small projects (afghan squares). Barbara Walker is very good at explaining how to do something.