Check back again for location and supplemental materials.
February 7, 2011
Little Bee - Feb. 28, 2011
Check back again for location and supplemental materials.
January 23, 2011
Madame Bovary - January 31, 2011
We'll meet January 31, 2011 at Julie's to discuss Madame Bovary.
Supplemental materials:
Supplemental materials:
- Sparks Notes: Study questions with essay suggestions
- GradeServer: Essay topics
- Cummings Study Guides: Summary, discussion and essay questions
- About.com: Discussion questions
- Barron's Book Notes/Pink Monkey: Discussion and test with answers
- Wikipedia entry for Madame Bovary
- Wikipedia entry for Gustave Flaubert
- Text at Project Gutenberg (Eleanor Marx Aveling's translation)
- Summary of Nabokov's lecture about Madame Bovary
As always, let me know if you come across any good supplemental materials and I'll add them here.
January 4, 2011
Updated book schedule
We made some switches to our book order. The new order is:
Jan. 31: Madame Bovary
Feb. 28: Little Bee
Mar 28: Brothers Karamazov
Apr 25: The Hunger Games
May 23: A Short History of Nearly Everything:
June 27: Alias Grace
July 25: Their Eyes Were Watching God
Aug 22: The Pillars of the Earth
Sept 26: I'm Not Scared
We swapped the red books and the blue books.
The new order is reflected in the calendar in the right column and in the "What We've Read" list.
Jan. 31: Madame Bovary
Feb. 28: Little Bee
Mar 28: Brothers Karamazov
Apr 25: The Hunger Games
May 23: A Short History of Nearly Everything:
June 27: Alias Grace
July 25: Their Eyes Were Watching God
Aug 22: The Pillars of the Earth
Sept 26: I'm Not Scared
We swapped the red books and the blue books.
The new order is reflected in the calendar in the right column and in the "What We've Read" list.
November 28, 2010
New York Times Notable Books for 2010
The New York Times today online published its list of Notable Books for 2010. The list includes new novels by authors we've read, including Per Petterson, Andrea Levy, and Louise Erdrich.
November 22, 2010
Out Stealing Horses, Per Petterson - Jan. 3 - UPDATED with materials
Supplemental materials:
- ReadingGroupGuide.com
- Nortana Reader's Guide
- Interview - Boston Globe
- Interview - Star Tribune
- Interview - The Guardian
- Review - NYTimes
- Review - NPR
- Review - The Guardian
- Discussion - The Quarterly Conversation (Per Petterson and the Masculine Question)
October 31, 2010
My Antonia, Willa Cather
Supplemental Materials:
- Full text of My Antonia can be read or downloaded from Google books in pdf format or from Project Gutenberg in a variety of file types (since its copyright is expired and it's in the public domain)
- Reading Group Guide
- Houghton Mifflin's Reader's Guide
- Teacher Vision Reading Guide
- Penguin Group Reading Guide
- Yale-New Haven's Teacher's Institute paper including Questions
- Novel Explorer's Summary (including discussions of themes, historical perspective, construction)
- Wikipedia entry for My Antonia
- Wikipedia entry for Willa Cather
- PBS/American Masters bio materials about Willa Cather
- Willa Cather Foundation on Facebook
- Steph's blog post
October 28, 2010
Dracula on Kerri Miller
October 25, 2010
Slate for 2010-2011
Nov. 22: My Antonia, Willa Cather
Jan. 3: Out Stealing Horses, Per Paterson
Jan. 31: Madame Bovary, Flaubert
Feb 28: Little Bee, Chris Cleeve
Mar 28: A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson
Apr 25: Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston
May 23: The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoyevsky
June 27: Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood
July 25: The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
Aug 22: The Pillars of the Earth, Ken Follett
Sept 26: I'm Not Scared, Niccolo Ammaniti
Here's how the pitching and voting went:
Classic
Madame Bovary - Julie, Katherine and Suzanne - so many votes we didn't count
General (First number is first ballot/Second number is run-off vote):
A Short History of Nearly Everything - Kathy (53)
Little Bee - Kerry (42)
Brothers Karamazov - Steph (36)
Alias Grace - Steph (34)
Out Stealing Horses - Kerry (33)
My Antonia - Gayle (26)
I'm Not Scared - Kathy (24)
Pillars of the Earth - Steph (22/31)
Cutting for Stone - Suzanne (21/15)
Zertoun - Julie (20/27)
Hunger Games - Connie (19/37)
The Dog Says How - Suzanne (16/17)
Their Eyes Were Watching God - Gayle (13/29)
Pass the Polenta - Suzanne (12/13)
The Farming of Bones - Gayle (10/23)
Founding Mothers - Gayle (8/5)
Kitchen Confidential - Katherine (7/4)
The Glass Castle - Ruth (4/?)
One Good Turn - Ruth (0/?)
Jan. 3: Out Stealing Horses, Per Paterson
Jan. 31: Madame Bovary, Flaubert
Feb 28: Little Bee, Chris Cleeve
Mar 28: A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson
Apr 25: Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston
May 23: The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoyevsky
June 27: Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood
July 25: The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
Aug 22: The Pillars of the Earth, Ken Follett
Sept 26: I'm Not Scared, Niccolo Ammaniti
Here's how the pitching and voting went:
Classic
Madame Bovary - Julie, Katherine and Suzanne - so many votes we didn't count
General (First number is first ballot/Second number is run-off vote):
A Short History of Nearly Everything - Kathy (53)
Little Bee - Kerry (42)
Brothers Karamazov - Steph (36)
Alias Grace - Steph (34)
Out Stealing Horses - Kerry (33)
My Antonia - Gayle (26)
I'm Not Scared - Kathy (24)
Pillars of the Earth - Steph (22/31)
Cutting for Stone - Suzanne (21/15)
Zertoun - Julie (20/27)
Hunger Games - Connie (19/37)
The Dog Says How - Suzanne (16/17)
Their Eyes Were Watching God - Gayle (13/29)
Pass the Polenta - Suzanne (12/13)
The Farming of Bones - Gayle (10/23)
Founding Mothers - Gayle (8/5)
Kitchen Confidential - Katherine (7/4)
The Glass Castle - Ruth (4/?)
One Good Turn - Ruth (0/?)
September 27, 2010
Book Picking Night: Oct. 25 at Kerry's at 6:00
We decided a few things tonight:
1) We'll start book-picking night at 6:00. We are committed to arriving on time and getting right to the business of pitching so that we have plenty of time to pitch and select books. It's important to people to enjoy the pitching/deciding, so we won't rush through that. If people need to leave before we're done, we won't bring a rushed conclusion to the voting.
2.) We'll have one slot designated for a classic. No other slots will be designated this year. Books pitched, but not selected, for the classics slot can be submitted for the general vote.
3.) We'll keep the voting method the same. Typically one person can get a book selected by applying all their pennies to a single book, so each person has the power to make sure we select a book of their choice.
4.) Going forward for the season, we'll be committed to arriving on time (6:30) and getting the book discussion started by 6:45 at the latest.
5.) As always: if you send me the long lists of what you're considering pitching, I'll post info here, so people can investigate your books prior to book-picking night, if they are so inclined.
August 24, 2010
Olive Kitteridge, Sept. 27
August 11, 2010
Business: October is Book-Picking Month
October is BOOK-PICKING Month! Be thinking about changes you'd like to see in our picking process. I'd propose that we bandy about thoughts and ideas at the Aug meeting; then, at the Sept meeting, crystallize those into votable issues to make decisions.
P.S. 8/15: I think we need an annual photo.
P.S. 8/15: I think we need an annual photo.
July 27, 2010
The Yiddish Policemen's Union, Michael Chabon: August 23
Supplemental materials:
- Chabon interviewed by Kerri Miller for Talking Volumes (2007) about YPU
- Harper Collins Reading Group Guide
- NYTimes review of YPU
- Bio of Chabon from his agency, including links to all kinds of fabulous stuff, including articles and essays Chabon has written and interviews he's given.
- Wikipedia entry for Chabon, including this paragraph that I thought was interesting (emphasis added and footnotes omitted):
In a 2002 essay, Chabon decried the state of modern short fiction (including his own), saying that, with rare exceptions, it consisted solely of "the contemporary, quotidian, plotless, moment-of-truth revelatory story." In an apparent reaction against these "plotless [stories] sparkling with epiphanic dew", Chabon's post-2000 work has been marked by an increased interest in genre fiction and plot. While The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay was, like The Mysteries of Pittsburgh and Wonder Boys, an essentially realistic, contemporary novel (whose plot happened to revolve around comic-book superheroes), Chabon's subsequent works — such as The Final Solution, his dabbling with comic-book writing, and the "swashbuckling adventure" of Gentlemen of the Road — have been almost exclusively devoted to mixing aspects of genre and literary fiction. Perhaps the most notable example of this is The Yiddish Policemen's Union, which won five genre awards, including the Hugo award and Nebula award. Chabon seeks to "annihilate" not the genres themselves, but the bias against certain genres of fiction such as fantasy, science fiction and romance.
June 29, 2010
An American Childhood, Annie Dillard: July 26
Supplemental Materials
- LitLovers Readers' Guide
- Story Circle Network (Austin Chapter) Readers' Guide
- Annie Dillard's website
- Wikipedia entry for Annie Dillard
- Interview with Annie Dillard, Yale Herald, Oct. 4, 1996
- In Conversation with Annie Dillard, Washington Post, June 24, 2007
- Article, The Ecotheology of Annie Dillard: A Study in Ambivalence, Pamela A. Smith (Note: Annie Dillard says she's not an "eco-" anything
- Article, Annie Dillard's Story, Questioning Faith.com, Taken from Ruth A. Tucker's Walking Away From Faith
- Steph's blog post
June 14, 2010
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, David Wroblewski: June 28
Supplemental Materials
- David Wroblewski's website
- Wroblewski's Discussion Questions
- One Minute Book Reviews Reading Group Guide. Includes a list of character parallels with Hamlet:
Edgar Sawtelle: Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
Trudy Sawtelle: Gertrude, Queen of Denmark and Hamlet's mother
Claude Sawtelle: Claudius, King of Denmark and Hamlet's paternal uncle
Gar Sawtelle: the late King Hamlet of Denmark and Hamlet's father
Doc Papineau: Polonius, Lord Chamberlain
Glen Papineau: Laertes, son of Polonius
Almondine: Ophelia, daughter of Polonius
Tinder and Baboo: I think they're wrong about this parallel, but they list courtiers Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern (who were spies for Claudius)
Forte: Fortinbras
Essay: Horatio
- New York Times review
- Chicago Tribune review
- Today Show interview with Wroblewski
- Hamlet - full text
- Discussion forum on the meaning of Forte (the stray)
- Steph's blog post
Updated 6/22/10 to add Chicago Tribune review and Today Show interview.
Updated 6/23/10 to add Wikipedia links for Hamlet characters and forum discussion on Forte.
Updated 6/23/10 to add Wikipedia links for Hamlet characters and forum discussion on Forte.
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