I think you should know:
Masterpiece Classic........
new film adaption of Jane Austen's Emma
airing on PBS in January
Just so you know.
It looks quite good: Looky Looky
happy new year, friends
And yeah....does anyone especially want to read a specific book in January?
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Sunday, December 13, 2009
january book
any ideas?
comment on this post with your suggestions. do it.
But mostly, good luck with finals. Do your very best.
comment on this post with your suggestions. do it.
But mostly, good luck with finals. Do your very best.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
I think it makes things more official to post about them on our blog
This Sunday, December 6th at 3 pm, we'll be reading portions of Charles Dickens' classic novella, A Christmas Carol, aloud. We'll follow up this festive reading with a Christmas-y dinner, starting around 4 pm. (acknowledging end of semester busyness, let me know if you'll be able to attend)
Then on Wednesday, we have tickets to see A Christmas Carol performed at the Hale Center Theater in Orem. Great fun. Let's plan on leaving from number 33 at twenty after seven on the ninth.
And let's start musing on a good book for January so I can put it on my Christmas list. Think about it. Is Wednesday night going to work for everyone next semester?
I love this time of year. All is merry and bright.
Then on Wednesday, we have tickets to see A Christmas Carol performed at the Hale Center Theater in Orem. Great fun. Let's plan on leaving from number 33 at twenty after seven on the ninth.
And let's start musing on a good book for January so I can put it on my Christmas list. Think about it. Is Wednesday night going to work for everyone next semester?
I love this time of year. All is merry and bright.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Monday, November 2, 2009
oh, Wednesday Book Club.
expression of gladness: Why it's time for a gathering!
details: 7 pm Wednesday, November 4th at Wellington II #33.
preview: Look forward to a sampling of Parker leading a no-doubt-will-be-scintillating conversation and Amanda dishing out edibles.
katie's request: (This writing is chalk-full of beautiful imagery, artful expression.) Why not dog-ear your favorite moment of pretty polished prose.
warning: while reading our 140 pages, I ran across some language that wasn't promoting my happiness, so I just skimmed/jumped ahead. Sorry....I didn't foresee that one coming in this book.
à bientôt: See you Wednesday.
details: 7 pm Wednesday, November 4th at Wellington II #33.
preview: Look forward to a sampling of Parker leading a no-doubt-will-be-scintillating conversation and Amanda dishing out edibles.
katie's request: (This writing is chalk-full of beautiful imagery, artful expression.) Why not dog-ear your favorite moment of pretty polished prose.
warning: while reading our 140 pages, I ran across some language that wasn't promoting my happiness, so I just skimmed/jumped ahead. Sorry....I didn't foresee that one coming in this book.
à bientôt: See you Wednesday.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Wednesday the 4th
Dear Book-loving Friends,
Let's meet in just under a week's time. Wednesday at say...7 pm, the 4th of November. (I am shocked by this change in months.)
Amanda has volunteered to provide goodness of food. Parker volunteered (or I think I volunteered him) to provide goodness in directing our conversation.
Reminder: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (not Stout OR Trout) Page 140
Much Love,
KLH
PS. I have yet to purchase or begin reading. How are those endeavors treating everyone else?
Let's meet in just under a week's time. Wednesday at say...7 pm, the 4th of November. (I am shocked by this change in months.)
Amanda has volunteered to provide goodness of food. Parker volunteered (or I think I volunteered him) to provide goodness in directing our conversation.
Reminder: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (not Stout OR Trout) Page 140
Much Love,
KLH
PS. I have yet to purchase or begin reading. How are those endeavors treating everyone else?
Enumclaw reader finishes Book Thief
I finished reading the Book Thief today; a little later than the rest of you.
I enjoyed the book. The characters were well developed. What a difference literacy made for Liesel. But receiving and giving love really impacted her character.
The book painted a picture of what life in war torn Germany was like for everyday people.
Even though the book was at times through Death's somewhat negative view, the goodness of a such a variety of people was clearly evident.
I'm looking forward to reading the next Wednesday Book Group selection. Although my copy is on hold with the King County Library System and my hold is 220 of 248 holds on 67 copies. It could be awhile.
I enjoyed the book. The characters were well developed. What a difference literacy made for Liesel. But receiving and giving love really impacted her character.
The book painted a picture of what life in war torn Germany was like for everyday people.
Even though the book was at times through Death's somewhat negative view, the goodness of a such a variety of people was clearly evident.
I'm looking forward to reading the next Wednesday Book Group selection. Although my copy is on hold with the King County Library System and my hold is 220 of 248 holds on 67 copies. It could be awhile.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
And the winner...........
OLIVE KITTERIDGE, by Elizabeth Strout.
This book looks like a delightful read. We're going to love it, I just know. After only a cursory glance at the back cover and first chapter (way to own the book already, Parker), I'm up-and-ready to read it.
the plan: read the first half by two-Wednesdays. I don't remember the page number right now. Josh? A little help? Oh I just found my scribble:
Be on page 140 on Wednesday November 4.
as a PS: I'm in a floral design class. I made some boutonnieres this week. Boys of book group, if you have anything fancy coming up in your lives, let me know. I have a boutonniere for you to wear.
This book looks like a delightful read. We're going to love it, I just know. After only a cursory glance at the back cover and first chapter (way to own the book already, Parker), I'm up-and-ready to read it.
the plan: read the first half by two-Wednesdays. I don't remember the page number right now. Josh? A little help? Oh I just found my scribble:
Be on page 140 on Wednesday November 4.
as a PS: I'm in a floral design class. I made some boutonnieres this week. Boys of book group, if you have anything fancy coming up in your lives, let me know. I have a boutonniere for you to wear.
Monday, October 19, 2009
VOTE on the right side of this page. Here are the options, described:
(WARNING. I tried to keep this short, but.....failed.)
Here's a glimpse at the options. Why not be an educated voter?
Please pick two on the poll on the right of this page. That should narrow down our options. By the way, these look great. Way to pick out some fabulous literature. Several....well I'll just have to read them, whether or not we get to them in book group or not.
Olive Kitteridge
Elizabeth Strout
Thirteen linked tales in this Pulitzer Prize-winning novel delve into small-town life in coastal Maine, unveiling ordinary people’s lives including retired schoolteacher Olive Kittredge.
The Elegance of the Hedgehog
Muriel Barbery
“This story of an aging concierge and a 12-year-old girl in an exclusive apartment house in Paris was a huge hit in France. Pithy, erudite, and full of heart, this book should be on everyone’s must-read list”
The Sound and the Fury
William Faulkner
This Faulkner novel is considered one of the key works of the century. It explores loveless family relationships through four (masterfully) fractured narrator voices.
The Trial
Franz Kafka
[opening line] “Someone must have been telling lies about Joseph K., for without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning…”
This psychological novel follows an ordinary man, Joseph. Repeatedly required to appear in court, Joseph grows frustrated and desperately watches his life spiral out of control.
Peace Like a River
Leif Engel
When his older brother is arrested for murder, Rube—an 11-year-old in 1960s Minnesota—and his father and sister take to the road, hoping to find Rube before the law does. In the end it's not Rube who haunts the reader's imagination; it's his father, torn between love for his outlaw son and the duty to do the right, honest thing.
Year of Magical Thinking
Joan Didion
This is a memoir of a year of the author’s life, in which she grapples with the grief of her husband’s sudden heart attack and death that accompanied the coma of their only child. It’s about “Didion's efforts to make sense of a time when nothing made sense.” Tribute to life and marriage.
The Turn of the Screw
Henry James
This terrifying psychological/supernatural(take your pick….seriously. Ambiguity at its finest) tale about follows a (maybe neurotic) narrator, a (mostly crazy) governess, and two innocent little kids.
Tinkers
Paul Harding
Harding's debut unfurls the final thoughts of a dying New England grandfather who made his living repairing clocks. “His deathbed revisits his turbulent childhood as the oldest son of an epileptic smalltime traveling salesman…The real star is Harding's language, which dazzles whether he's describing the workings of clocks, sensory images of nature, the many engaging side characters who populate the book, or even a short passage on how to build a bird nest.”
The Idiot
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Erm. This one is too tricky for me to give a synopsis. Seems like a really innocent sort of figure gets into some tragic mess in his society that’s all about money, power, and manipulation.
Three Cups of Tea
Greg Mortensen
Mortensen fails climbing K2—the world’s second tallest mountain—and ill, is cared for by a small Pakistani village. In return, he promises to build the town’s first school—a project that grew to constructing other schools across rural Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Cat's Cradle
Kurt Vonnegut
This science fiction thriller (did I just characterize that right?) follows a random mix of characters in search of the world’s most dangerous substance: ice that freezes at room temperature. One review explained its thematic issues as nuclear terror, the complications of science, American imperialism, global capitalism and the role of religion in public life.
Picture This
Joseph Heller
(Here’s what Britt tells us: He also wrote "Catch-22," which was so bizarre and fascinating. A review of "Picture This:" "Mr. Heller treats the whole panorama of history past and present with the bravado of Mark Twain in one of his sassier moods." Aristotle discusses history with Heller's main character.)
Here's a glimpse at the options. Why not be an educated voter?
Please pick two on the poll on the right of this page. That should narrow down our options. By the way, these look great. Way to pick out some fabulous literature. Several....well I'll just have to read them, whether or not we get to them in book group or not.
Olive Kitteridge
Elizabeth Strout
Thirteen linked tales in this Pulitzer Prize-winning novel delve into small-town life in coastal Maine, unveiling ordinary people’s lives including retired schoolteacher Olive Kittredge.
The Elegance of the Hedgehog
Muriel Barbery
“This story of an aging concierge and a 12-year-old girl in an exclusive apartment house in Paris was a huge hit in France. Pithy, erudite, and full of heart, this book should be on everyone’s must-read list”
The Sound and the Fury
William Faulkner
This Faulkner novel is considered one of the key works of the century. It explores loveless family relationships through four (masterfully) fractured narrator voices.
The Trial
Franz Kafka
[opening line] “Someone must have been telling lies about Joseph K., for without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning…”
This psychological novel follows an ordinary man, Joseph. Repeatedly required to appear in court, Joseph grows frustrated and desperately watches his life spiral out of control.
Peace Like a River
Leif Engel
When his older brother is arrested for murder, Rube—an 11-year-old in 1960s Minnesota—and his father and sister take to the road, hoping to find Rube before the law does. In the end it's not Rube who haunts the reader's imagination; it's his father, torn between love for his outlaw son and the duty to do the right, honest thing.
Year of Magical Thinking
Joan Didion
This is a memoir of a year of the author’s life, in which she grapples with the grief of her husband’s sudden heart attack and death that accompanied the coma of their only child. It’s about “Didion's efforts to make sense of a time when nothing made sense.” Tribute to life and marriage.
The Turn of the Screw
Henry James
This terrifying psychological/supernatural(take your pick….seriously. Ambiguity at its finest) tale about follows a (maybe neurotic) narrator, a (mostly crazy) governess, and two innocent little kids.
Tinkers
Paul Harding
Harding's debut unfurls the final thoughts of a dying New England grandfather who made his living repairing clocks. “His deathbed revisits his turbulent childhood as the oldest son of an epileptic smalltime traveling salesman…The real star is Harding's language, which dazzles whether he's describing the workings of clocks, sensory images of nature, the many engaging side characters who populate the book, or even a short passage on how to build a bird nest.”
The Idiot
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Erm. This one is too tricky for me to give a synopsis. Seems like a really innocent sort of figure gets into some tragic mess in his society that’s all about money, power, and manipulation.
Three Cups of Tea
Greg Mortensen
Mortensen fails climbing K2—the world’s second tallest mountain—and ill, is cared for by a small Pakistani village. In return, he promises to build the town’s first school—a project that grew to constructing other schools across rural Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Cat's Cradle
Kurt Vonnegut
This science fiction thriller (did I just characterize that right?) follows a random mix of characters in search of the world’s most dangerous substance: ice that freezes at room temperature. One review explained its thematic issues as nuclear terror, the complications of science, American imperialism, global capitalism and the role of religion in public life.
Picture This
Joseph Heller
(Here’s what Britt tells us: He also wrote "Catch-22," which was so bizarre and fascinating. A review of "Picture This:" "Mr. Heller treats the whole panorama of history past and present with the bravado of Mark Twain in one of his sassier moods." Aristotle discusses history with Heller's main character.)
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
WHAT do you think we should read next?
As discussed at tonight's fabulous gathering, to help pick our next read you need to:
1. post your suggestion(s)*
2. vote on a yet to be set-up poll (on this blog) based on the suggestions
3. come next wednesday where we will vote between the top three or so novels
That would be 7.00 pm, October 21. This will be a quickie---without any pre-reading attached. Be excited.
*A note on suggestions: try to pick widely-likable books that we hopefully haven't read. And if you pick it, be ready to convince us to read it.
one last thought: Wow. Loved the discussion tonight--beautiful contributions and insights.
1. post your suggestion(s)*
2. vote on a yet to be set-up poll (on this blog) based on the suggestions
3. come next wednesday where we will vote between the top three or so novels
That would be 7.00 pm, October 21. This will be a quickie---without any pre-reading attached. Be excited.
*A note on suggestions: try to pick widely-likable books that we hopefully haven't read. And if you pick it, be ready to convince us to read it.
one last thought: Wow. Loved the discussion tonight--beautiful contributions and insights.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
I'm not convinced anyone looks at this blog, but...
Just in case someone does take a gander:
BOOK CLUB.
7 PM. TOMORROW. Wellington II # 33 (that's 732 N 800 E #33)
Last thoughts on THE BOOK THIEF
......plus we'll probably end up brewing some hot cocoa (if there's an autumn chill in the air) and munching on pumpkin cookies.
......and we need to talk about our future book (excitement)
Come with all your brilliant thoughts and insights.
NOTE. this book club is all about increasing your life happiness. if coming tomorrow will make your life happier, then come. if it won't, then don't come. (and secret: we'll still be friends. BFFs). hope to see you, all the same, though.
BOOK CLUB.
7 PM. TOMORROW. Wellington II # 33 (that's 732 N 800 E #33)
Last thoughts on THE BOOK THIEF
......plus we'll probably end up brewing some hot cocoa (if there's an autumn chill in the air) and munching on pumpkin cookies.
......and we need to talk about our future book (excitement)
Come with all your brilliant thoughts and insights.
NOTE. this book club is all about increasing your life happiness. if coming tomorrow will make your life happier, then come. if it won't, then don't come. (and secret: we'll still be friends. BFFs). hope to see you, all the same, though.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
in a week
Hello All.
I saw Britt today in the HBLL and she has actually finished Book Thief. Which must mean that: (a) I'm.....behind.....in reading and (b) you probably are too and (c) our next successful gathering is approaching.
Final Discussion of Book Thief will be held 7 pm on Wednesday October 14th. (As always, location will be 732 N 800 E #33. And contrary to some book group members' beliefs, the fireplace in that location is fake, so won't be flickering). Anyone want to volunteer to lead our thoughts and musings? Bring a divine eatable?
AND. (What's been keeping everyone from sleeping at night): what book will house our next reading experience?
Here's how we're going to do this:
1. Think of a book you'd like us to read (remember our group, what you think would encourage spritely conversation, something that has some good sort of merit, something we haven't all read)
2. Voice your suggestion as a comment to this blog post. Include the book's title and author
3. We'll assemble the choices and the secret book-choosing committee of the Book Group will hopefully pare them down to 2 or 3 fantastic stand-outs.
4. We'll vote on Wednesday (secret ballots or blind voting or some such no doubt), and start the flow of excitement for our next book.
final thing I'll say: happy TUESDAY. and.......why aren't you all on the first floor of the hbll? it's basically THE place to be. if you're an accounting major.
I saw Britt today in the HBLL and she has actually finished Book Thief. Which must mean that: (a) I'm.....behind.....in reading and (b) you probably are too and (c) our next successful gathering is approaching.
Final Discussion of Book Thief will be held 7 pm on Wednesday October 14th. (As always, location will be 732 N 800 E #33. And contrary to some book group members' beliefs, the fireplace in that location is fake, so won't be flickering). Anyone want to volunteer to lead our thoughts and musings? Bring a divine eatable?
AND. (What's been keeping everyone from sleeping at night): what book will house our next reading experience?
Here's how we're going to do this:
1. Think of a book you'd like us to read (remember our group, what you think would encourage spritely conversation, something that has some good sort of merit, something we haven't all read)
2. Voice your suggestion as a comment to this blog post. Include the book's title and author
3. We'll assemble the choices and the secret book-choosing committee of the Book Group will hopefully pare them down to 2 or 3 fantastic stand-outs.
4. We'll vote on Wednesday (secret ballots or blind voting or some such no doubt), and start the flow of excitement for our next book.
final thing I'll say: happy TUESDAY. and.......why aren't you all on the first floor of the hbll? it's basically THE place to be. if you're an accounting major.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Come. Tomorrow!
Oh, wow. It's time for a reminder.
Tomorrow, Wednesday, September 30th--come to Wellington II #33 at 7:00 pm for BOOK GROUP, gathering 2.
I understand that Book Group is probably not your current prioritized reading. I believe in school, so I'd be worried if it was. We can still be friends and you can still be a book-group-member if you (a) didn't read the book at all, (b) read 23 pages, or (c) now think book group is the worst idea you've heard this week. If you've read the 303 pages, brilliant. If not, you're still invited to come and pretend to have read them and talk about the book. (Or not pretend...either way is acceptable.)
If you can't come this week, don't fret. Come when you can.
AND. lastly. I adore this book. I'm giddy with excitement to chit-chat about it with all of you.
Tomorrow, Wednesday, September 30th--come to Wellington II #33 at 7:00 pm for BOOK GROUP, gathering 2.
I understand that Book Group is probably not your current prioritized reading. I believe in school, so I'd be worried if it was. We can still be friends and you can still be a book-group-member if you (a) didn't read the book at all, (b) read 23 pages, or (c) now think book group is the worst idea you've heard this week. If you've read the 303 pages, brilliant. If not, you're still invited to come and pretend to have read them and talk about the book. (Or not pretend...either way is acceptable.)
If you can't come this week, don't fret. Come when you can.
AND. lastly. I adore this book. I'm giddy with excitement to chit-chat about it with all of you.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Erm, that was a success, I'd say
Wednesday's gathering convinced me that decisions to start book groups are wise. We are going to have a lovely time filled with great people, good food, brilliant conversation, and some excellent reading.
As a reminder (and for those who couldn't make it to Meeting #1):
We'll be meeting every other week on Wednesdays at 7 pm. And we decided to always make it at Wellington II # 33, so that's where you should come. Next meeting...
As a reminder (and for those who couldn't make it to Meeting #1):
We'll be meeting every other week on Wednesdays at 7 pm. And we decided to always make it at Wellington II # 33, so that's where you should come. Next meeting...
- Wednesday September the 30th at 7 pm
- By then you should be to the end of Section 5 (page 303)*
- Chelsea and Britt are bringing some kind of delectable goodness to eat
- Katie's "facilitating" the discussion (I think that's the word that we decided best describes that role)
- A sign of good discussions to come: "I didn't know they thought about the Holocaust in Australia."If you want to read more about the author, Markus Zusak, check out his website.
- As you're reading, think about references to color. How do they affect the story? And also consider the narrator's voice: how is it different from other narrators' styles you've read? how does it influence your reading experience?
- And Hillary, what a chocolate pie that was.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
wednesday the 16th
The momentous first gathering:
Come 'round to 732 E 800 N on Wednesday night at 7 pm for some bookly joy.
What's happening: This time, we'll just be getting acquainted with The Book Thief, one another, and the idea of a book group. So no big reading assignments before Wednesday. In fact, no great need to have a book by then. If you know anyone else that wants to join the crew, bring them along.I can promise a good time and some delicious (yet-to-be-determined) food.
Oh, this is going to be jolly.
Come 'round to 732 E 800 N on Wednesday night at 7 pm for some bookly joy.
What's happening: This time, we'll just be getting acquainted with The Book Thief, one another, and the idea of a book group. So no big reading assignments before Wednesday. In fact, no great need to have a book by then. If you know anyone else that wants to join the crew, bring them along.I can promise a good time and some delicious (yet-to-be-determined) food.
Oh, this is going to be jolly.
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