Wednesday, July 30, 2014

August 2014 Bookclub News

Dear Bookclub,

A fine little lunch at Bellamy's was the backdrop for the discussion of "The Burnable Book". 

 Medieval Bellamy

 With agreed appreciation for the delve into 14th century London culture, Terrie further enlightened us about Holsinger's scholarly crafting.










Gower and Chaucer were indeed literary rivals. Beware the gentle looking poet.









Terry presented three great titles - as always a tough decision:

"We are Called to Rise" by Laura McBride *
"All the Light We Cannot See" by Anthony Doerr
"The Age of Miracles" by Karen Thompson Walker

*chosen for December

Please be sure to note the calendar and synch it with yours!


"The Boys in the Boat" is next.... shall we row?

Happy Reading!
LK


Thursday, July 24, 2014

July 30 is the new August

Dear Bookclub,
Just a big head's up that next Wednesday, July 30 is our August Bookclub meeting. Terry F. has chosen "Bellamy's" on Grand in Escondido for our lunch at noon:




Looks great!

We will be discussing "A Burnable Book" by Bruce Holsinger. Hopefully you have started it/finished it and know that the following humor would never be so aptly direct in Holsinger's terms:



Happy Reading!
LK



Sunday, July 6, 2014

July 2014 at The Winery

Dear Bookclub,
The Bernardo Winery was the perfect setting for our round table discussion of "The Goldfinch". Truly a top-notch waitress, who knew how to serve and artfully ignore us for an inordinate amount of time (were we really there for nearly four hours??!), eased us into a lulling afternoon, complete with rehashing the novel's highlights and themes, double dessert order, and ample time to catch up on each others' antics.


Tartt owned us as readers, with her 2.1 pound hardcover of 775 pages (or 123,324,546,687,099 page e-read) and we agreed, a lot of it was uncomfortable to read. This is not a massage therapist reference. The end was a great reward for all the discomfort and I am sure we will all keep the tale sharply remembered in our evermore challenged memories (nod to TF).

"Goldfinch" was number one in the recent Wall Street Journal Piketty index. Many bestsellers go unread (Stephen Hawking's "Brief History of Time" had been dubbed "the most unread book of all time"). With the statistical analysis done on Amazon "popular highlights', it has been determined that most of the highlights occur in the last 20 pages of the "The Goldfinch". Mix in some non-scientific hocus-pocus and voila - it was deemed that 98.5% of readers finish. "Capital in the Twenty-First Century" by Thomas Piketty (a humble 700 pages), is dead last with 2.4% of readers finishing.

Complete article (99% Piketty):

http://online.wsj.com/articles/the-summers-most-unread-book-is-1404417569

We had fun considering the three diverse books Wanda presented for our upcoming November selection:

"Book of Ages: The Life and Opinions of Jane Franklin" by Jill Lepore
"The Lion Seeker" by Kenneth Bonert
"We the Eaters:If We Change Dinner, We Change the World" by Ellen Gustafson      *chosen

Next up: "The Burnable Book".

 Please be sure to mark your calendars .... .we changed our next meeting date from August 5 to July 30.

Happy Reading!
LK