‘Today Book Club’ selection: ‘More Book Lust’
In this follow-up, librarian Nancy Pearl continues to share her love of books with more reading recommendations. Here's an excerpt
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Author Lisa Scottoline's legal thrillers have been entertaining readers for the past 10 years. But when Scottoline wants to read a good book, she turns to librarian Nancy Pearl for recommendations. Scottoline has selected Pearl's "More Book Lust," for the "Today Book Club." Here's an excerpt:
I think the best books for groups to discuss are those in which the ending is deliberately ambiguous, so that every reader will have a different answer to the question “Well, what really did happen?” Or books in which the main character is faced with a difficult choice that resonates with readers no matter their age or race or ethnicity. Here are some that I’ve found work extremely well in generating heated discussion among book group participants.
Deborah Schupack’s "The Boy on the Bus," begins with every parent’s worst nightmare — the disappearance of your child. Only in this case, a boy who looks a lot like Meg’s eight-year-old son, Charlie, gets off the school bus at the end of the day. The problem is, he seems to be very different from the real Charlie in some definable ways (he doesn’t have asthma and Charlie did) and in some indefinable ways (Meg just knows it’s not her son). Many readers will no doubt wonder why the family doesn’t just do a DNA test to find out, but the questions the novel raises about identity are fascinating.
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The paperback edition of Leah Hager Cohen’s novel "Heart, You Bully, You Punk," has a wonderful cover. What makes it perfect for a book group is that it poses an interesting dilemma: when your head tells you one thing and your heart another, which one should you listen to? The answer to this conundrum will change the lives of the three main characters: a teenage girl, her father, and her math teacher at the private school she attends. One question to begin with is “What does the novelist think about the role of the heart in decision making?”
Barbara Gowdy’s "The Romantic," asks us to consider yet another human dilemma — what it means to try to save the person we love best from destroying themselves, while knowing full well that they’re hell-bent on making that task impossible for us. Louise, who has loved Abel since both were children, must decide how much responsibility she has for ensuring his well-being when she realizes that Abel is becoming increasingly self-destructive and seems determined to drink himself to death.
Two novels by Anne Ursu make for wonderful discussions. In the first, "Spilling Clarence," a chemical that causes people to remember everything in their lives infects a city’s population — and everyone has a different reaction to being bombarded by their memories. Some characters are comforted, while others find the return of the past too difficult to bear. The second, "The Disapparation of James," has an inconclusive and mysterious ending that will drive some readers crazy. Physician Hannah and stay-at-home dad Justin Woodrow take their children — Greta, seven, and James, five — to the circus for Greta’s birthday; everyone in the family is thrilled when James is selected to appear on stage as part of the last act of the evening. The magician’s final stunt is supposed to make James disappear, but it backfires horribly when James actually does disappear. Ursu takes us inside the lives of all the characters, including the magician, the policeman who is assigned to the case, and of course James’s immediate family, offering parallel realities and alternative possibilities of what really happened.
For some good nonfiction selections for your book group, see the “Dewey Deconstructed” section.
Excerpted from "More Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment and Reason." Copyright 2005 by Nancy Pearl. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of the publisher, Sasquatch Books.
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