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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: reading groups, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Why I won't read Wolf Hall - Anne Rooney



I have nothing against Hilary Mantel or Wolf Hall. But the time has come to be more discerning than just reading something because everyone else has read it, it's piled high in Waterstones and I'm mildly curious.

How many books can I read in my whole life? Or, more usefully, my remaining life? Of course, that depends how long is left. Looking at my family's record, I might have another 50 years. If I read a book a week, that's about 2,500 books to go. Some of those books haven't been published yet.

I can probably list many hundreds of books I know I want to read, or re-read. Wolf Hall is long, so I might have to swap out a couple of short James Joyce books and a volume of poetry to give it a slot. Or never re-read the Moomintroll books or Alan Garner. Worth it? I don't know without reading WH, but I'm guessing that, for me, it's not. If I have to choose between Tolstoy and Wolf Hall, Tolstoy will get the gig.

Some things I have to read for work, or to keep up. On the list for work at the moment are re-reading Plato's Timaeus and Critias, CP Snow's Two Cultures, IA Richards' Practical Criticism, maybe a quick refresher on Empsom and Leavis, and finishing (for the first time) Francine Prose's Reading like a Writer. Actually, I wasn't counting the work reading in the book a week, so these don't need to take any of the 2,500 slots. But these books are relevant as I'm (re)reading them in preparation for my new role as Royal Literary Fund Lector (title may change), which starts in September. And that's also why I'm thinking about which books are worth reading.

Lectorships are a new departure for the RLF. All professional writers, the lectors will run reading-aloud groups in the community. Initially, there will be groups in Cambridge, London, Sussex, Somerset, Yorkshire and Glasgow. The idea is to encourage the development of critical reading skills. The groups may target specific groups - elderly people, single parents, dentists, accountants, ex-convicts, people with ginger hair - it can be any kind of group. Or they may be open to anyone. How the group is advertised and made up is left to the discretion of each lector. All lectors have previously been (or currently are) RLF fellows. That means we've all done at least one stint in a university, and this is a chance to work with people outside an education setting.

The model for the sessions is Socratic dialogue, with a good deal borrowed from the tradition of Cambridge practical criticism. Each session (one and a half to two hours long) starts with participants reading aloud the selected text – a short story, a poem, or a piece of non-fiction - and then discussing it: what effect does it have? how does it work? does it work? It means reading slowly, savouring the choice of words, pausing to see how the punctuation works, following the thread of each sentence and unpicking it, learning how writing works at a detailed level. We hope it will help people with their own writing, and enjoy literature more fully. Becoming a critical reader will also mean they are better equipped to read all texts with an eye on how their response is constructed and how they might be being manipulated. A country filled with critical readers would give our political leaders and large corporations a much tougher time.

But that’s not all. It’s likely that many people who come to the groups will already be readers. The groups will – we hope – introduce them to a wider range of literature than they might have found on their own. If someone co

19 Comments on Why I won't read Wolf Hall - Anne Rooney, last added: 5/19/2010
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2. Jack-of-all-tradebooks


The pace here is kicking into high gear. I am blogging, interviewing, presenting, researching, writing, selling, networking, and even sleeping once in a while. Today’s author is truly a jack-of-all-trades.

Living It Up to Live It Down, the second novel in my newly released series, is up for both the Cybils Award and the Sid Fleischman Humor Award. The publisher Web site, www.rfwp.com,  now lists The Kirsten Hart Series, and both books in the series–A Shadow in the Dark and Living It Up to Live It Down–can be purchased online there. They will also be available soon on other sites.

This morning I interviewed with The Author Show and, later this week, hope to interview with my hometown newspaper in preparation for my visit and book signing in Southeast Iowa over the Thanksgiving holiday.

Next week, I have two school visits and a signing at a Barnes & Noble in Kansas City, Missouri. Then the following Monday I start a new job with the State of Nebraska. This is only part-time temp work, so I expect to continue promotions with a blog tour and other events.

A reviewer told me she thinks my books would be great catalysts for discussion among Christian teens. I have one church youth group that is considering launching a reading group with the books, and I have high hopes for this. I plan to prepare discussion questions for the books and will post them to this site. And I’d like to find other Christian teen reading groups. Any suggestions, anyone?

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3. Books as a social pursuit

It came to my attention that I have been neglecting those of you who who have absolutely no desire to learn about ereaders so today I promise this is the last you will hear about them from me.  Today instead I thought I would share two articles about reading and how it can effect your social life. 

If you belong to a book club you may be happy to learn that and an an increasing number of authors are jobbing their way around various book clubs to discuss, with their readers, what they thought of the novel.  I think it might take away from the whole book club process if you bring the author in right away but after a discussion about the book, getting to actually ask the author questions about the text could be a really neat experience, and a good reason to read and coming authors. 

From The Daily Beast:

There is a thing authors do, nervously, when they think no one is looking. They check out their numbers—online sales figures, ratings, rankings, reader reviews. Not long ago, Joshua Henkin, a professor of creative writing at Sarah Lawrence and Brooklyn College, was doing just such a thing in his home office. He was scrolling through Goodreads.com, monitoring the reception of his new novel, Matrimony. A user named Shelley had given him a mixed review—three stars out of five. Henkin clicked on her name and decided to email her, offering to attend her book club, if she had one. She did—that very evening—and, after several exchanges, Henkin was set to call into it.


And then moving from from friends recommending a good book, to books recommending a good friend.  LibraryThing.com and the aforementioned Goodreads.com have shown that this works pretty well but The Guardian thinks that relationships based on books should stay at the friend level.  The British paper takes a pot shot, in a fairly amusing article, at Boarders launching its dating service for bibliophiles suggesting that looking for love based on reading tastes can only lead to heartache. 

Oh, the first couple of dates would go fine: you'd huddle over coffees or beers, discussing with animated, shining eyes your love of, say, Haruki Murakami. Then, as things progress, you might go for a weekend away, perhaps walking hand-in-hand down the narrow streets of Hay-on-Wye. Reclining by a roaring fire in a country pub, something like pride would flutter in your breast as you watch the way your new love's lips move slightly as they read. Then the rot would set in. "You thought Wind-Up Bird Chronicle meant what?" "Actually, I did discover Murakami three years before you." "Yes, but I read Norwegian Wood in the original Japanese …"

And before things started to go publicly, horribly, harrowingly wrong, imagine how dull a couple who were both into the same books would be. You might just about put up with your friend's constant evangelising about Patricia Cornwell, but what if she turned up with a new beau who spouted the same hero-worship? And what if our couple were to take the plunge and move in together? Does any home really need two copies of everything on their bookshelf? Whose editions get sent to the charity shop?


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4. Monday multimedia: Freebird's post-apocalyptic book group

Peter Miller of Freebird books on the Brooklyn waterfront wrote in to let us know about the Chrysalids' cameo in a segment the store's post-apocalyptic book group filmed for AMC's Science Fiction blog. When asked why the store hosted such a group, Peter remarks that, given the store's industrial setting (which despite such dire description, looks stunning in the clip), "to be honest, if there were an apocalypse, it'd look more or less the way it does now."

Freebird's post-apoc group discussed John Wyndham's Chrysalids the other week. Next up is Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake and a Valentine's day apocalyptic-themed shorts festival.

The book group might also want to look into The Slynx by Tatyana Tolstaya or The Inverted World by Christopher Priest (and of course, The Apocalypse Reader, edited by Justin Taylor).

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