The Brown Bag Discussion Group is a monthly book club sponsored by the Guerneville Library. We meet for an hour the second Thursday of each month at 12:30. A committee of Sonoma County librarians chooses the books. We have established an e-mail list for the discussion group, and a blog, http://www.BrownBagDiscussionGroup.blogspot.com , to hold attendees comments on the readings. We have 3 minutes to present our views on a book and 500 words takes about 3 minutes to read aloud.
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Circling the Sun by Paula McClain
Into the Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea
This is
an awesome book – very entertaining – and well-written.
It is
the “Sonoma County Reads” selection for 2015.
That means it is available for free at any public Library in Sonoma
County, in Spanish or English.
No
credit for translation is given in the English edition, so we must assume that
the author, himself, wrote in one language or the other and then translated
himself.
The
book works in either language and is a pleasure to read.
Wind / Pinball
I’ve
only recently discovered this author, albeit famous to the rest of the world
for decades. This is such surprising,
consciousness-shaking prose. He is
always an inspiration to unique thought and alternate views of the world around
us.
.These
are his earliest works, novellas: just now translated.
Forty
years ago, but his style is recognizable and thoroughly enjoyable.
Sunday, November 8, 2015
The Nature of the Beast by Louise Penny
I have
just finished this 350-page tome, with total satisfaction from another successful
Québécois (?) novel.
Chief
Inspector Gamache has retired into the not so sleepy village of Three Pines,
outside of Quebec. But author Louise
Penny just couldn’t let her Sûreté murder detective quietly retire. 2015 has brought us another novel in this
fascinating and unique series.
I’ve
lost count of the number of novels in this series, upwards of ten. The count is important to genre lovers, who
like to periodically “binge read” for weeks or months. This is a good series for that sort of
passion.
The
family and friends of Three Pines are always central to the plot themes of a
Chief Inspector Gamache novel.
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
Right
off the top let me say that this is a brilliantly written book. The author has captured the argot, if there
can be one, of tween cancer kids.
An
author takes on the challenge of directing us, we the readers, into following their
plot line. Not asking too many questions;
nay, manipulating us into tears and cheers and suspending disbelief in all else
but their story.
John
Green, the author, has done this with “… .. Stars”. I bought in, almost from the first chapter. I was following with cheers and tears
throughout most of the book.
Thankfully
(or unfortunately), we are not allowed to delve into word choice, sentence
structure, motivations, or even characterizations, since this is, in fact, a
novel intended for young teenagers. We, Library
book club readers, have long been out of touch with this demographic. Sympathetic, yes; but unable to judge whether
this book merits value to its’ supposed audience.
I
enjoyed the opportunity to read this book.
However, I can’t judge whether or not we went far afield in a domain
alien to Brown-Baggers.
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