
Energize Your Book Club...
Here’s the handout I presented at the Vernon Area Public Library on Friday night.
The new library is spectacular!
Energizing Your Book Club
Coordinating Food and Drink
Brooklyn by Colm Toibin (have New York Cheesecake)
Little Bee by Chris Cleave (make Honey Bee’s- Rum/Lemon Juice/Honey)
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Moloka’i by Alan Brennert – (add pineapple juice to a pitcher of iced-tea)
Fieldtrips and excursions
How to pick your book club books?
Keep the books varied. Don’t read two books about any one subject, place or time period in a row.
Pick a book that corresponds (loosely) with the month. For example in January read The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey because it’s a cold, snowy month. In June, read The Distant Land of my Father by Bo Caldwell in honor of Father’s Day.
Let the moderator or host of that month pick the book that is read. He or she should want to read the book they are discussing.
Some clubs vote from a long laundry list of books in January for the whole year out, while others go month by month. Both ways are okay, just figure out what works for your book club’s group dynamic.
Take a break in either August or December, which seem to be busy months for most groups. Book club should not be laborious. Have either a free read, a book exchange party or both!
Get in touch
Authors love to be contacted. Their emails are usually available on the jacket of the book or on their website. Ask them a question that you can discuss at book club; for example, “Which character was hardest to write? Did you always plan for this particular ending? Why this title?”
Skype! Several authors love to Skype (video conference) with book clubs. They also are happy to chat via speakerphone. It’s a great enhancement to book club discussions.
Props in all shapes and sizes
Friends, neighbors, teachers and librarians can make excellent props. So do books, spices, magazines, photos, YouTube videos, music and more.
Research and Questions
The moderator, leader or host (MLH) should gather info about the author. It’s a simple Google search and can often offer insight into the book.
MLH can get discussion questions from the publisher but it’s also good to have some of your own. Try and find a quote from the book you found interesting or inspiring. Read it aloud and ask the group to discuss it. Ask the group if they learned anything new from the book, find out which character they related to the most and why, see if anyone found any recurring symbols or themes throughout the book. Cast the book as a movie and see how everyone imagines each character.
If some members are less comfortable speaking up and others overly loquacious, it’s a good idea to write your questions out on index cards and hand them out to the group. Have each person read the question on his or her card and be the first to reply to it. Play a game! Turn simple questions and/or answers into a Trivial Pursuit or Jeopardy type game with the group divided into two teams.
PLEASE ONLY COPY OR REPRINT WITH PERMISSION
OF THE GOOD BOOK FAIRY
Labels: Book Club