Book Club Ideas To Ensure A Successful Discussion

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

Like hundreds of people around the world, you have set up a book club to get the most out of your reading hobby and share your passion with others. But what’s the best way to start sharing together? Fortunately, help is at hand. There are lots of book club ideas that you can integrate into your club to make your evening enjoyable for both you and your members. In this article, I have suggested a few book club ideas that may help.

To get the ball rolling, you could start with a prompt from the book. A prompt is simply something form the book that represents one aspect of the story, for example photos of the country or location in which the book is set, or perhaps music that sets the scene. It could even be playing a snippet of the film if the book has been made into a movie. Playing this snippet could lead into a discussion on how the characters are portrayed in both the book and the film, and which depiction people prefer.

An extension of the prompt idea is to collect a number of items from the book and put them in a bag or box. Then each guest can pull out an item and explain how it relates to the story. This can often be humerous. This is a simple yet effective strategy for getting the discussion started.

If you think that memories may be a little blurry, then having a prepared handout to give out is great. This could include information such as characters, setting and plot details or themes or any other information you think relevant to the book. Don’t worry too much about what information you include as the main purpose of the handout is to stimulate the memory. A handout can also help to keep people on track!

A very low preparation way of starting off can be to get your ideas for discussion from your members. For instance, you can pass out pieces of paper and ask people to write down any questions they have or aspects of the book that they’d like to discuss. After this, you’d simply choose 2 or 3 of your groups ideas to begin. You can almost guarantee strong participation and interest with this strategy as the subggestions have come from within the group.

My final suggestion is to refer to the book. It’s best to choose a passage that you are interested in, or that summarises or depicts one of the central themes in the book. Then you can ask you members for their personal responses and opinions. Leading the disscussion for you book club can be a wonderful experience. Hopefully, these book club ideas give you a sense of confidence and a place to begin. May your club grow bigger and bigger.

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Need book suggestions please?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

Okay, so I am a HUGE Harry Potter & Twilight fan. My friends and I are starting a book club and we are going to start off by reading those two series first, but after that…
That’s where I need your help, I would really like some suggestions to other book series that are similar to HP and Twilight, both fantasy and appealing to young adults. I’ve heard Eragon is a good choice, but I would like some more opinions.
Thanks for everyone’s suggestions!

The Eragon series – Eragon, Eldest and Brisingr – is great, but also try the Age of Fire series (I think there are five of them, but I only own four) by E. E. Knight, told from dragons’ point of view.

Or the Inkheart series by Cornelia Funk (they made the first one into a movie), where a kid makes stories come to life by reading them.

Or The Wizard Heir and The Warrior Heir by Cinda Williams Chima, where a regular kid discovers he’s not so ordinary after all.

The Artemis Fowl books are great too, there’s about six of them now. He’s a modern-day kid who finds out there’s a kind of faerie underworld…

Some older series that are also worth reading are the Deryni books by Katherine Kurtz (no dragons, but a wizardly race set in a parallel medieval time) – there are more than a dozen of them – and the Pern books by Anne McCaffrey (Pern is an agricultural-based Earth colony where dragons have been bred) – there are like 20 of those. The Amber books by Roger Zelazny are awesome, too, they’re a whole family of people with odd powers.

And check out the Hitchhiker’s series – Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galazy, Restaurant at the End of the Universe, Life the Universe and Everything, So Long and Thanks for All the Fish, and Mostly Harmless by Douglas Adams.

Well, that’s enough to keep you going for a while… Have fun with your book club!

Any suggestions for my next book club meeting?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

It’s my choice at my next book club meeting and I’m looking for a book that will really knock everyone out, as my last 2 choices weren’t rated very highly!

We are all female, mid-20s and our highest rated books so far have been The Kite Runner, The Road, Love In The Time of Cholera and Catcher in the Rye.

Can anyone recommend and AMAZING book, with lots of good discussion points and preferably no more than 400 pages long?

Thanks!
Er, no – I haven’t asked this before and I do a lot of research (I buy new books every week!) but so far my book club friends don’t seem to share my taste in books so was just looking for some other ideas. Thanks to everyone who has made suggestions so far – these all sound really interesting! :)

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

Compare the nonsensical prose to today’s conditions and problems in daily life. Knock their socks off-people will not shut up after thinking about it. I was amazed how much fun it was-I memorized most of it as a child and it was inspiring to myself how fast it all came back-and it enthralled me at 50 just as much as it did when I was 10. The group is mostly married couples and moderators such as myself revolve ever other meeting-those who have published works and speak very well from memory. Storytellers mostly and it’s done for free-a fun thing away from the seriousness of the literary world.
Not kidding at all. 30 people showed up for third reading at our club last fall. Still talked about-most popular thing we ever did. The long involved classics can be so difficult and as you said tastes differ so much.

Also a plus is the fact that practically everyone has read it and knows some of the prose-like Curiouser and Curiouser and ‘Down the rabbit hole" is a good/bad term in business and so on.

s_e_s

I am an avid reader and am interested in joining a Book Club in NW8, WC1.. any suggestions?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions


Here’s a site where you can search for book clubs in London.

Good luck!

What book-club-worthy books do you recommend?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

I had a similar question posted earlier- but I am new to this I closed it out too early- I would like more suggestions! Thanks to those who answerd though, they were all good suggestions.
I am looking for suggestions for my book club- our favorites have been ‘The Kite Runner,’ ‘Memoirs of a Geisha,’ ‘How to be Lost,’ ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring,’ ‘Night,’ ‘The Memory Keeper’s Daughter’, and several other Target book club picks! We are a group of 20 and 30 something women, many teachers. Any ideas of what we’d like? Considering our favorites, do you think we would like ‘Saving fish from drowning’ by Amy Tan? Thanks!

Suite Francais can’t remember the artist. It’s non fiction though.
The Alchemist, short read by Paulo Coehlo
Snow by Orhan Pamuk, Nobel prize in Lit.
There is an apple in my freezer, non fiction memoir set in WW II
The bell jar, Sylvia Plathe

Any suggestions for our next book club read? Female teachers ages 20 – 50?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions


Domestic Affairs by Eileen Goudge
Woman in Red by Eileen Goudge
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kid
Paper Hearts by Debrah Williamson
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaed Hosseini
The Lavender Hour by Anne D. LeClaire
The Friday Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs*****so good!
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah*****so good!
Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen
The Sugar Queen by Sarah Addison Allen

What is the best way to make new friends and get to know my neighbors? Is starting a book club a good idea?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

I live in a big apartment complex, I’ve lived here nearly a year and I’d really like to meet my neighbors and make some friends. Does anyone have any suggestions?
What about a book club?

Have a party..don’t like parties. ..Have a wine tasting…don’t drink..have a foreign film night..really like books..start a book club.

Anyone have a suggestion for a name for a business book club / reading group?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

I am starting a reading group / book club within my company and would love some suggestions (serious ones – no jokes, please) for a name to call the group. Focus is on business topics. Thanks!

Literally Speaking!
Bet on Books
The Ties that Bind
Focus on Business
Business Bookworms
Reading Between The Lines

What book would you suggest as the choice for my monthly book club?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

I am in a book club of adult females who meet monthly. This month is my turn to choose the book and I would welcome any suggestions or recommendations. The books are usually contemporary fiction.

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

LGBT: Can you help us start an online book club?

Author: admin  //  Category: book club suggestions

My friend and I are starting up an online book club, but we don’t know how to get started. Can you leave comments/video responses/etc on this video to give us some suggestions on our book club?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYdEvp4_qGM

No.