Book Club: Next!

All –

The group assembled this morning to discuss The Plague has decided on our next book and meeting time. We will be reading The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot.

This is the recent (2010) nonfiction story of a journalist’s discovery of the history of a woman whose cancer cells have been reproduced in laboratories for generations, for much of that time without the knowledge of the woman herself or her family. A fairly detailed synopsis and review is at this Washington Post review. Unfortunately the book is not yet available in paperback, but copies are available in local libraries. (There is a demand for it, so I suggest interested members start checking early.)

We plan to meet to discuss this book at Panera’s the last Saturday in June, the 26th, at 9:30 AM.

– Steve G

Book Club Selections

SteveGAs you all know, the Contemporary Issues book club started with George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, for January, and this month we are reading My Stroke of Insight, by Jill Bolte Taylor, Ph.D. We are meeting to discuss it at Panera’s on Biesterfield Road, on Saturday, February 20, at 9:30 AM.


As we’ve discussed, it is probably a good idea to choose our future books for more than one month at a time, so people can plan. Our detailed current list of suggestions (from various sources) is at http://www.swhi.net/~steveg/StNick/book-list.html. It has just been updated, so take a look!

I am proposing that we plan to continue alternating fiction and nonfiction, and try to alternate “heavy” or serious works with more entertaining ones. To make the process easier, I suggest we choose our next few from the following “short list.”

March

  • Candide (Voltaire)
  • Good Omens (Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett)
  • Letters From the Earth, and The Diaries of Adam & Eve (Mark Twain)

April

  • 95 Theses (Martin Luther)
  • Existentialism and Human Emotions (J.P. Sartre)
  • The Year of Living Biblically (A.J. Jacobs)

May

  • The Plague (Albert Camus)
  • The Shack (William P. Young)
  • A Canticle for Leibowitz (Walter M. Miller, Jr.)

If you think you will – or even just might – participate, please e-mail Steve Gruenwald with your choices. Please copy and paste the above list into your e-mail and indicate your first, second, and third choices for each month – or, if you like, state other preferences.

–  Steve G

Book group starts with a chilling classic novel

SteveG

The “Contemporary Issues” group transitions to book-club format with the classic novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell. One of the most influential books of the 20th century, this is where we get the ideas of “Big Brother [is watching],” “doublespeak,” “Thought Police,” and “Orwellian” (from the author’s name). It’s a frightening but gripping story of how the future looked from the perspective of 1948. You can find this book at any library and any typical book store.

We are hoping to discuss this book on a Saturday morning, at a restaurant or coffee shop not too far from church. Likely dates are January 16, 23, or 30. Please try to let Steve or Valerie Gruenwald know if you hope to participate, so we have some idea of how many people to expect. This does not commit you to showing up. Also let us know if you want help with getting a copy of the book, or transportation to the group, or especially if you have a suggestion for a meeting place.

We are still a “Contemporary Issues” adult education group, just changing our approach to how we explore issues. We’re looking for books that raise issues that might not come up in bible study or the liturgy, but have indirect relevance to ethics, spirituality, religious beliefs, etc. Future books may be fiction or nonfiction, serious or lighthearted. Participation in the discussion of one book does not mean you need to read others that may not interest you. A “starter” list of possible books to consider is at http://www.swhi.net/~steveg/StNick/book-list.html. Feel free to make suggestions – and to invite others to the group.

In the meanwhile, time and Christmas season permitting, our group will try to continue Sunday discussions of science and religion. We are now discussing the universe – all of it – from the point of view of modern physics. You do not have to know anything about modern physics or the universe to participate, and this discussion (but not the universe) will end when we are ready to discuss Nineteen Eighty-Four.