Sara Reyes | What's a book club?
Book club dynamics. Hmm, interesting topic. This past Wednesday I realized we've been meeting at my house for four years. A long time but something has evolved. As people come and go we have a core group of women who monthly come and spend three to five hours every third Wednesday at my house. First putting together a meal, followed by eating, followed by a talk with an author on a speaker phone then followed by lots more time "visiting."
I also watched as the dinner was put together. We've been meeting so long it's like a family: everyone assumes a role, chore and position. And you don't mess with the status too much. We've had new people come every month, so we have a "hostess" who makes them feel at home and puts a drink in their hand. Also gets them out of the temperamental chefs way. (I say this with GREAT affection, so if you're one of those temperamental chefs you will NOT kill me in the near or far future! okay?) I've learned my place is to sit at the breakfast table aka my office desk and observe. I no longer make any comments about the cooking, as I value my life and enjoy the food too much!
After the food is assembled we sit down. We have to be eating by 7:15 because the author will call at 7:30 and it's so impolite to talk with your mouth full or to try to converse over clicking flatware and plates. Those phones pick up everything! We have the author talk down to a science as well: introduction, summary of book, prepared questions, general conversation, and closing. Then we finish eating, have the dessert and coffee, a refill of the glasses and settle in to talk or what my mother and grandmother would call 'visiting."
We talk about the author and their books. What we liked, didn't like. What the author said that may change our perceptions and whether we agree or not. Did I mention some of us are contrarians. We always have copies of the author's books on the table, so they'll get passed around and more comments pursue. Then eventually we get to our lives! That's always interesting. Then a bit more coffee, talk about future and it's 10pm and time to go home...or in my case, to clean up.
All this became relevant because our author guest this week, Laura Griffin asked about our club. What we do at meetings, how we're organized, pick books and generally curious about our set-up. As I said, we're different than most in we never require the members to read the book. I know enough will to have a lively discussion, besides it's certain that the members who suggested this author and are required to prepare questions will have read the book. Plus we ask for author suggestions a couple of time a year so it's not as if we're coming into an author cold. And if the author is interesting (and who isn't talking about their "baby"), we'll go out of the dinner with converts who have been known to stop by a Barnes & Noble or Wal-Mart on the way home and buy her current book, they'll hunt down her last books and be sure to buy all her future ones. I've seen it happen over and over. And the author got to do her presentation in her jammies (possible) and with a glass of wine (we encourage it)! What a deal for both of us!
So, if you attend a book club, tell me what it's like, after all, we like to share stories, no? And as a special prize from our book club...I'll give away a brand-new copy of something in our treasure trove of new arrivals! Just enter here or better yet, leave a comment!
Sara Reyes
DFW Tea Readers Group
Join us at Readers 'n 'ritas in 2009!
Pre-Order WHISPER OF WARNING today, Laura's next book in the series and from what she told us about it, it's going to be a HIT!!!
Labels: book club, Laura Griffin
13 Comments:
I have never been a member of a book club, but it sounds like a lot of fun! Maybe I will find one and join one of these days.
We have a sort of informal book club. It is more of a family group of three of us that adore reading and trade books and opinions on recent reads. It's fun because many times I can find new authors to read based on books they comment on.
I am a member of a book club through my women's group at church. About 6-8 of us meet monthly to review the book we read and to get a new book from our leader. It has been fun and she has picked various Christian books: humor, contemporary and historical romance, suspense, women's fiction. They are books I would not pick myself so I enjoy the group.
My closest friends and I formed a book club several years ago when it became harder and harder for us to get together. We thought if we had an intellectual purpose, we would feel less guilty about ditching responsibilities. It seems silly now because friendship is at least as important as most responsibilities, but the book club has stuck. We alternate between classics, modern literary fiction, mystery, and romance. There are six of us and we meet once a month, alternating houses. We do a potluck where we each pick a character from the book and bring a food we think that character would like, and we make a signature cocktail for each book. We may get into it a bit too much, but we have such a blast and the discussions are always lively and sometimes downright insightful (depending on how many cocktails have been imbibed).
I dont belong to a book club but if I did I think I would want it to be similar to the set up you described. It sounds like a great way to do it.
My book club is a dud compared to yours...wow, I love the structure and the variety of activities and it is great that you don't have to read the author...for so often someone isn't interested in the book and then it takes awhile to get them back into the swing of the bookclub! Enjoyed your post very much, you gave me some great ideas!
Darby
darbyscloset at yahoo dot com
I don't really attend a book club. But I'm a member of a Dutch discussion board about books and once a year (most of the time it's in June) we all get together.
That's always a lot of fun. Btw, this year will be our 5th meeting and I think it's going to be awsome! I'm already looking forward to go!
Our book club is a lovely group of women whose diverse interests, personal stories and great cooking abilities allow us an unforgettable evening each month.
Hi Sara,
I used to belong to The Great Books Reading Club, but it was far for me to travel at the time. But in the past year, I've been lucky to have 2 friends (I met one through the other) whom I meet with once a week, or every two weeks, depending, to discuss books we're interested in reading. We've always done it over lunch and coffee, sometimes at a restaurant, sometimes at a home.
Julie R.
Great Post! It was very interesting and I like how your book club is setup. I am not a member of a book club now since I moved to TN. When I lived in OH and worked at the Library, we had a book discussion group that meet once a month. The group would decide on a book and the following month talk about it. Half of the group would read the book and half of the time they didn't discuss the book. The library was in a small community and everyone new each other, so the discussion turn into a gossip group instead. When this happen, sometime someone in the group would get mad, since they came to discuss the book that was for that month.
I've never had a chance to be a part of a book club. Maybe someday I'll have time!
I love reading the different ways book clubs are run. Every one gives me different ideas because, of course, LOL I like to keep it "fresh"
One additional idea which we've been kicking around for the truly lazy, or reading challenged, is to see a movie based on a book.
What do you think? Or is that really cheating?
Sara,
With regard to seeing a movie based on a book, I think that only seeing the movie is probably cheating yourself, if anything. I used to have my son read a book before he could see the movie.
However, I must admit that I saw the Harry Potter movies without reading the books. But I had a free critique of the movie vs. the book as my son and his friend analyzed everything on the way home and thereafter. Ironically, they told me that I needed the books to understand because the movie just didn't explain it all and it changed some things around.
So reading the book first does give you a better understanding behind the characters' actions, but it may spoil the movie for you.
Julie
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