The Buffista Book Club: the Harry Potter iteration
This thread is a focused discussion group. Please see the first post below for the current topic and upcoming book discussions. While natter will inevitably happen, we encourage you to treat this like a virtual book club and try to keep your posts in that spirit.
By consensus, this thread is reopened specifically to discuss Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It will be closed again once that discussion has run its course.
***SPOILER ALERT***
- **Spoilers for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows lie here. Read at your own risk***
If we need more books to pick, I'd like to suggest either Louisiana Power and Light or Confederacy of Dunces. Both are light and fun which might help get people back into the groove and hey! LaF2F.
Though CoD actually is in NO, LP&L is probably my favorite for the narrator's insights.
I would like to keep the thread. I have really enjoyed participating in and reading the discussions, even when I don't feel I have much to add.
I know I have not volunteered to be a book selector, so I sort of feel like I am speaking out of turn here, but I wonder if the choice of books hasn't been limiting discussion. As much as I enjoyed
The Red Tent
and
Mister Sandman,
they weren't action packed, and I'm finding it almost impossible to get into
Dirt Music
because again there is very little action (a quarter of the way through). It's not they aren't good books or somehow unworthy, but I find it hard to say anything interesting about them. I did love reading the comments about Dinah's story in relation to the Midrashim.
I'm not saying every book needs to be a rollicking adventure through space and time, but three books in a row about domestic troubles and internal struggles is a little much for me personally.
I also would hate to see it close. But quite frankly, I've gotten really, really bogged down in job-related stuff (both wrapping up my current cases and searching for new employment) and haven't had the time to really get involved all that much.
I seem to remember there were a lot of very good ideas about running a successful book club, both online and off. Maybe somebody would like to volunteer to shepherd this thread for the next few months and see if we can't generate some interest in some really good selections and discussions.
For my part, I intend to read every selection and participate to the extent I am able.
Please keep it, this and UnAmerican are the only threads I manage to keep up with.
I'd like to keep the thread. I've been dark lately, and am off to be dark again, but my conference is in about three weeks, and I should be able to have a life again shortly after that.
Ok, we seem to have ground to a bit of a halt here. Let's see if we can do something about that.
I'd like to suggest that we take a few days to throw some more recommendations out there, as well as volunteers to pick books.
So, my suggestion: anyone with a book to suggest please email me at my profile addy between now and Thursday. [bmercer AT grenzglier DOT com] Put book club in the subject line if you remember - it'll make sorting them out easier. I'll collect the suggestions along with those remaining from our earlier list and post them all at once on Friday. People who would like to choose a book can maybe drop me a line as well and we can do the hat thing.
I don't have anything concrete to offer in terms of what kind of book we should be looking for, but I'd say that when making a nomination, try to think about books that really left you with something to say, or something to wonder about or piece together.
Something else to throw out there - Is the fifteenth a bad time? Would the first of the month be more workable? I'd love to get started again so that our discussion dates would resume on March 15, leaving less time than ususal for reading. But perhaps April 1st would be better? Or even April 15?
Cindy's post reminded me that I never came back and reported after my last post. Unfortunately, I only received one response - with an excellent rec, actually, John Hershey's
Grendel.
So, where do we go from here?
Unfortunately, I only received one response - with an excellent rec, actually, John Hershey's Grendel.
John Hershey or John Gardner?
I haven't posted here in forever, but I thought I'd share my feelings since I was excited by the thread in the beginning. But let me say first that I'm not really sure I have the right to suggest changes since I have sort of dropped out.
Being a student who reads a lot of rather intellectually demanding material for class, any extra reading I do is for pleasure. Honestly, there's not much of it these days, but the truth is that when I read something beyond schoolwork, I want it to be fun. However, when I'm reading a mostly "fun" book, I'm not sure how much there is to discuss about it.
I can see myself participating more actively in the future (after July) but for now, the only book I can imagine reading would be one that is pretty accessible. I"m not saying that I think the thread should close. I just wanted to explain that while I like the idea, I don't have time to truly participate right now.