Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Rossettti Letter - December 2009


A book club for those of us without the time for meetings. Take our book suggestion of the month and leave your comments here. Book are available at the library or reserve yours by clicking on the title.


A mystery...

Sunday, November 1, 2009

The Saint of Lost Things




A Book club with those of us without the time for meetings. Take our book suggestion of the month and comment to this blog if you feel like chiming in.






" It is 1953...Young Maddalena misses the rolling hills and olive groves of the small Italian town where she was born and longs for her sisters and her mother and father... Her husband, Antonio, feels lucky to be in the land of opportunity and dreams of opening his own restaurant, until he becomes unwittingly embroiled in his friends' vengeful plot against a neighbor."

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Remember Me?


A book club for those of us without the time for meetings. Please take the suggestion of the month. Copies are available at the library or reserve yours today by clicking on the title below. Leave your comments about the book.



"When 28 year old Lexi Smart wakes up in the hosipital she's in for a big surprise. Her teetha re perfect. Her body is toned. Her handbag is Vuitton. Having survived a car accident- in a Mercedes - no less - Lexi has lost a big chunk of her memory, three years to be exact, and she is about to find out how much she has changed"

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Post Birthday World


A Book club with those of us without the time for meetings. Take our book suggestion of the month and comment to this blog if you feel like chiming in.


"hinging on a single kiss this enchanting work of fiction depicts Irina's alternating futures with tow men temeramentally worlds apart yet equally honorable"

Saturday, August 1, 2009

A Thousand Acres - August 2009


A book club for those of us without the time for meetings. Please take the suggestion of the month. Copies are available at the library or reserve yours today by clicking on the title below. Leave your comments about the book.


Now Reading: A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Straight Man - July 2009


A book club for those of us without the time for meetings. Please take the suggestion of the month. Copies are available at the library or reserve yours today by clicking on the title below. Leave your comments about the book.



Now Reading: Straight Man by Robert Russo

Monday, June 1, 2009

Saint Maybe - June 2009


A book club for those of us without the time for meetings. Please take the suggestion of the month. Copies are available at the library or reserve yours today by clicking on the title below. Leave your comments about the book.


Now Reading: Saint Maybe by Anne Tyler


Friday, May 1, 2009

Palace of Illusions - May 2009


Finally a book club for those of without time to go to meetings. Take our suggestion for the month, read along. Post your comments to this blog.


Questions to ask while you read:

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

The Alchemist's Daughter - April 2009



Now Reading: The Alchemist's Daughter by Katherine McMahon

Questions to Ask while you read: (from the publisher)

1. How do you feel about the way the novel and its characters deal with the issue of slavery? How does the situation of each character color his or her opinion of the slave trade? How do those opinions help define their characters? How would you describe Emilie ’s opinion of the slave trade? Does her point of view change during the course of the book?
2. At the time of their meeting and then marriage, how do you think Aislabie truly feels about Emilie? Is he in love? Does he have other motivations for wanting to marry her? How and why do these feelings change during the course of the book?
3. Why are the Gills so loyal to Selden, despite evidence that they have disagreed with their master and were, at the end of his life, blamed for Emilie ’s fall from grace?
4. Would you describe Emilie as a sentimental person? Considering the purely intellectual education she has received at her father’s hands, how do you make sense of the sentimental attachment she has toward her mother’s possessions?
5. Despite her intelligence, Emilie tends to miss or ignore many signs that point to Aislabie ’s true nature: his involvement in the slave trade; flaunting expensive new ornaments while claiming poverty; undermining his wife ’s wishes about the remodeling of Selden; refusing to consider the concerns of Selden’s tenants. Why do you think it takes infidelity on such a blatant scale for her to see him for what he is? Are there other signs she may have missed?
6. Do you think Emilie will be a better landlord than her father was? Why or why not?
7. Did Emilie fail her father’s parenting “experiment,” as she supposes when she reads his notebooks? What outcome do you think would have satisfied him? Were his hopes realistic? Were they fair?
8. After the discovery of her mother’s true identity, Emilie begins to regard men’s attentions to herself in a new way. What do you make of this change?
9. Do you think that Sarah and Emilie could ever have been friends? Is there any action Emilie could have taken early in her marriage to gain Sarah’s affection? What do you think their relationship might have been like if Emilie had invited Sarah to stay at Selden with her child?
10. Discuss the laboratory explosion. What do you think Emilie expected to happen? What did she hope to accomplish?

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Land of Mango Sunsets - March 2009


A book club for those of us without the time to go to meetings. Take our book suggestion for the month and read along. Post your comments or answers to the question below.
Now Reading The Land of the Mango Sunsets by Dorothea Benton Frank Pick up your copy in front of the circulation desk.
Try out recipes from the area http://www.dotfrank.com/Whats_New.html
Questions to Ask while you read:
1. At the beginning of the novel, Miriam is desperate to be accepted among the society set and their opinions mean a great deal to her. Does she care too much about other people's judgments? How has this affected her life?
2. When Miriam needs solace she returns to Sullivans Island—the "land of mango sunsets". What does the place do for her? Do you have a healing retreat? What kind of a special place would you like to have if you don't?
3. The novel's heroine transforms herself from "Miriam Elizabeth Swanson" to "Mellie." How do these two personalities compare and contrast with one another? What do you like about them? Do you see yourself in either?
4. Weather and nature are an important backdrop in the novel. How do they reflect Miriam's transformation?
5. What is the relationship like between Miriam and her mother, Miss Josie? How are the women alike—and how are the different? How do parents impact their children's lives?
6. Friendship and family are the cornerstones of The Land of Mango Sunsets. What makes a good friend? What makes people "family"?
7. When Liz's relationship turns violent and she is terribly hurt, Miriam blames herself. Why does she feel responsible? Was she to blame?
8. Miriam did not know her mother was ill until very late. Why do you think Miss Josie and Harrison didn't tell her?
9. In the prologue, Miriam says "Recognizing yourself in my mistakes won't be pretty, but perhaps it will keep both of us from making the same mistakes again." Can we learn from others' mistakes or do we have to make our own to truly learn life's lessons?
10. Miriam also says "Things happen for a reason." Do you agree?
11. What role Miriam's fling with "Manny the Man" play in the novel? Though it didn't end quite how she expected, was it ultimately good for her?

Sunday, February 1, 2009

The Middle Place - February 2009


Finally a book club for those of without time to go to meetings. Take our suggestion for the month, read along. Post your comments to this blog.


Questions to ask while you read:

1. What is the effect of having the book structured as it is? Why do you think Kelly’s childhood is presented as flashbacks rather than chronologically? In what ways does her childhood affect her adult self?

2. How does Kelly’s breast cancer diagnosis prepare her for her father’s cancer? Does her own experience help her to help her father, or does it hinder her ability to cope?

3. Why do you think it is important for Kelly to travel in Australia and Nepal? What need does the act of traveling fill for her?

4. How does Kelly change when she becomes a parent? In what ways does she choose the family she’s created over the one that created her?

5. Kelly’s family is her safety net. She turns to them when she’s in trouble and they run to help. What are the safety nets in your life? What are the mainstays in your life that you can’t imagine living without?

6. What is “The Middle Place”? Why is this the title of this book? What does being in The Middle Place mean to Kelly? What does it mean to you?


Questions from kellycorrigan.com

Thursday, January 1, 2009

The Senator's Wife - January 2009



No meetings required but lend your comments below for the book we are currently reading:

Now reading - The Senator's Wife by Sue Miller

Meri is 37, newly married and newly pregnant, standing on the cusp of her life as a wife and mother, and recognizing with some terror the gap between reality and expectation. Delia, her neighbor in the adjoining New England town house, is twice Meri's age, the wife of Tom Naughton, a venerated former U.S. senator --- a man whose habitual infidelities are an open secret in Washington. As dissimilar as they may appear, these two women find themselves leading strangely parallel lives, reckoning with the contours and mysteries of marriage, one refined and abraded by years of complicated intimacy, the other barely begun.

Questions to ask while you read:

1. In the second paragraph of Chapter One, Miller says, "Meri has occupied the backseat the whole time—at first because that's just how it happened when they all got in the car, then by choice." What does this tell us about Meri? Did your first impression of her turn out to be accurate?

2. Discuss the title. Why do you think Miller called her novel "The Senator's Wife" when Meri's story gets equal time?

3. Several times in the novel, it's suggested that moving to a new home equals an opportunity for new beginnings. Which move proves to be most important to Delia?

4. At times there are parallels between Meri and Tom, Delia and Nathan, and at other times the pairings are rearranged. Who do you think is most similar? Most unlike each other? Who would you most like to spend time with, if these were real people?

5. Delia's relationships with her grown children are quite varied. Why do you think she wound up with three such different results? What kind of mother was she?

6. Re-read the last paragraph of the novel. Did Meri really act out of love? Why do you think she did it? What price did she pay, if any?

Questions from readinggroupguides.com