Thursday, October 4, 2012

Welcome to our 2012/2013 Book Club Season!

We had a great first meeting of the season last week as we discussed A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, other books we read this summer, and potential choices for the rest of the year. Thanks, Dorie, for hosting us! It was nice to see some faces we haven’t seen for a while and some “regulars.”

We chose books for the next few months and agreed to change our meeting schedule, beginning in November, when we'll shift to a fourth Monday of the month. We'll choose a longer book for December/January and discuss it after the holidays. Vote for your choice in the poll to the right!

Our next meeting is October 22 at Ellen H’s house to discuss “Gone Girl,” by Gillian Flynn. This seems to be a hot book these days, and both Donna H and Cindy W have read it and agreed it would be good fodder for discussion.

Beginning in November, we’ll switch to a fourth Monday schedule when we meet at Cindy W’s, 17 Broken Tree, to talk about “Zeitoun,” by Dave Eggers (another Donna H recommendation!).

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Orange is the New Black

Every so often we read something for book club on which we all agree we would recommend. "Orange is the New Black" was NOT one of those books! We all agreed that there was a lot of potential for the topic, but that the author fell short.

This did not preclude us from having a lively discussion about the content and what would have improved the book, including better or stronger editing to actually weave together the threads of a story and recurring themes, a more detailed account of how her time in prison informed her choices following the experience, fewer - yet more impactful - examples and stories of the women she met during her stay. Another suggestion for improvement was to leverage this vehicle to inspire change in the system.

Early on in the book, Kerman references that as she prepared for her time away, she read all that she could about life in prison and that the only books she could find had been authored by men. This attempt at a story appeared to be her way of filling that niche and making some money for herself.

Moving on...we also spent some time reviewing our options for the May book. As we talked through the choices that had been presented in the poll, three members who originally voted for Rules of Civility actually changed their votes given that we just read The Paris Wife set during the same timeframe and we wanted to change it up. Our May book is now The Violets of March by Sarah Jio, recommended originally by Donna H.

Our meetings have been smaller the past few months, so hopefully we'll see some more - and even some new - faces in May!

Friday, April 6, 2012

The Paris Wife

The Paris Wife generated much discussion amid our small group of four during the March meeting. Dorie, who said this was among one of her favorites of the books we've read, led the discussion with several compelling questions.

The intermingling of historic figures with the fictional account of Hadley and Ernest's life together made for an interesting story and a view at life in the 20s in Europe.

Given that the gathering was so small, we did not select the remaining books for our book club season as we had originally planned, but rather determined our book for April (non-fiction selection Orange is the New Black) and we're asking for the rest of the group to weigh in on the May book (see the poll to the right).

Thank you to everyone who shared some new items for our "What We'd Like to Read" list. Keep those suggestions coming!

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Vote for March!

We had a small group of five for our January meeting, but no shortage of conversation! Our multi-talented hostess, Donna, wowed us with her culinary skills by preparing an Ethopian dish, doro wat (chicken) in recognition of our Ethiopian-based January book, Cutting for Stone.

The book led to much discussion on a range of topics, including the character development, use of symbolism, strong female character (Hema), and the diversity of heritages represented in today's top hospitals.

Our next book, selected based on votes in last month's poll, is Major Pettigrew's Last Stand. Vote for your choice for our March book. The poll will close on February 15 and I'll let everyone know which book "won" in the invite for the February meeting.