|
|
|
| ReadingGroupGuides.com
Newsletter |
February 2007 |
| This
Month on
ReadingGroupGuides.com
|
|
|
|
| Reading, Knitting and Cheerleading
Snow! |
|
It's gotten
really cold here in New York, and they are saying snow
is on the way. I have decided in my next life I want to
be a weatherperson. Think about it. You can declare it's
going to snow, or rain, or be sunny, be wrong and keep
your job. You can get jazzed by the potential for bad
weather. Seriously, I think it's amazing that these
folks can send an entire city of people out of the house
with umbrella in hand. Hmmmmm...and to think all I want
to do is send you out of the house --- or into the house
for that matter --- with a book you love in
hand!
This weather
has me indulging in two of my favorite activities ---
reading and knitting. I've become a regular at my
favorite yarn shop, A Yarn for All Seasons. Between making
a blanket for the new baby of an old friend and putting
the finishing touches on my most ambitious project yet
--- a cozy and winter-worthy sweater --- my friends,
family and staff often shake their heads and wonder
aloud "Where do you have the time?" I just remind them
that I'm the Queen of Multitasking. I knit and read at
the same time!
Speaking of
multitasking, my radar has been turned up recently to
the popularity of knitting-themed books hitting stores
in the last few months. From How-tos and guidebooks like
the just-published When Bad Things Happen to Good Knitters:
An Emergency Survival Guide by Marion
Edmonds and Ahza Moore to novels like The Friday Night Knitting
Club by Kate Jacobs, knitting is quite in
vogue, and, more importantly, it seems I truly AM able
to combine two of my preferred pastimes. Flipping the
pages and clicking the needles makes you think how
a good book is really quite similar to an expertly-woven
scarf or sweater --- complex, colorful and just the
thing to keep you happy and warm on a cold winter
day.
Continuing with
our knitting theme --- I am THRILLED to be featuring
The Friday Night Knitting
Club as one of our special opportunities for Registered Book
Groups. We have six (yes six!) this month and they
are all pretty wonderful. While we have author chats and
book giveaways for Nicholas Evans, Elizabeth Gilbert,
Lalita Tademy and Robert Alexander, we also have
two very different offers.
For The Friday Night Knitting
Club we are giving 10 groups the chance to
win not only a signed copy of the book, but an official
"Friday Night Knitting Club" Tote bag stocked with
goodies like needles and yarn. Being a huge fan of Mary
Kay Andrews, my other favorite offering is the chance
for one VERY lucky group to win up to 20 copies of
Savannah Breeze (one for each
member of their group), a set of all of Mary Kay
Andrews's backlist titles --- including Blue
Christmas, Hissy Fit,
Little Bitty Lies and Savannah
Blues --- as well as Mary Kay Andrews's
signature Lemon Cream Cheese Pound Cake personally baked
by the author, which will be a perfect treat for your
book club meeting. In December, Mary Kay baked this cake
and sent it to the office for a holiday gift. Take it
from me --- it was a HUGE hit.
Our ReadingGroupGuides.com Newsletter
prize is Family Tree by Barbara
Delinsky, a book I'm really looking forward to diving
into.
We also
added 27! new guides this month and
updated some of your favorites, like The Year of Magical Thinking
and The Space Between Us to
paperback. I'm always curious to know whether groups
wait until books come out in paperback to select them
for reading and discussion. Does your group prefer to
wait? And if so, is this simply due to budgetary
concerns? Or do you and your members not care either
way? If you want to drop me a note, you can send to my
trusty sidekick Jen Krieger at Jen@bookreporter.com who will tally up
responses and pass on to me --- we love hearing what you
have to say.
If any groups are reading, or have
read/discussed Nora Ephron's I Feel Bad About My Neck, can
you send me a note at Carol@bookreporter.com by Friday of
this week? Curious as to why? You'll hear more about
this book next month.
Another
opportunity for you to weigh in is our Poll. This month we want to know
whether you and your group would travel for one of your
favorite authors and why/why not. Be sure to let us know
your thoughts!
February is
Black History Month and it seems perfectly appropriate
that Oprah's Book Club Selection is The Measure of a Man by
Sidney Poitier. In this age of self-indulgent and
over-the-top memoirs, Poitier's is really remarkable
both in the topics it addressees and the humility of his
narrative voice. Truly something
special.
My son begins
college visits this week --- you can imagine I'll be
knitting my way through the tours, listening to
bright-eyed young guides describe the joys of collegiate
life. I can remember the excitement of being his age and
seeing a world of possibilities opening up to you. It's
bittersweet knowing he's going to be off on his own in
less than two years, but I also have total faith in his
ability to pick out his own colors, select the
perfect-sized needles, plot the design and create
something truly remarkable with his
life.
Stay warm
readers. If you are in the New York area snow MAY be on
the way, but good books definitely are on your radar
below.
Carol Fitzgerald (Carol@bookreporter.com) |
|
Click here for details about our Newsletter
Contest.
| |
|
Now Available in Paperback: EAT,
PRAY, LOVE by Elizabeth
Gilbert |
|
In Eat, Pray, Love Elizabeth
Gilbert leaves behind an excruciating divorce,
tumultuous affair, and debilitating depression as she
sets off on a yearlong quest to bridge the gulf between
body, mind, and spirit traveling to Italy, India and
Indonesia. Part self-deprecating tour guide, part wry,
witty chronicler, Gilbert relates this chapter of her
life with a compelling, richly detailed narrative that
eschews the easy answers of New Age rhetoric. Happiness,
Gilbert comes to realize, "is the consequence of
personal effort. You fight for it, strive for it, insist
upon it, and sometimes even travel around the world
looking for it."
This title has a special Registered Book Club
Opportunity being offered. For details click here.
|
|
Click here to read the guide for
Eat, Pray,
Love.
| |
|
ALPHABET WEEKENDS by Elizabeth
Noble |
|
Natalie and Tom have been best
friends forever. But Tom wants more, and he's going to
prove to Natalie that they were meant to be together. He
makes a wildly romantic proposition: spend 26 weekends
together, indulging in a different activity from A-to-Z.
In six months, he argues, they will be desperately in
love. The cautious Natalie --- still heartbroken over
her ex-boyfriend Simon --- isn't so sure.
But Tom and Natalie aren't the
only ones coping with the vagaries of love. Natalie's
mother is going through her own crisis, and Lucy, Tom's
unhappily married sister-in-law, yearns to give in to
temptation. All of them are about to learn that no
matter how clever they are, love --- and life --- isn't
always as easy as A, B, C...
Check out the Alphabet
Weekends Sweepstakes!! Enter to win a getaway weekend
for 2 at a luxurious hotel in Las Vegas at www.elizabethnoblebooks.com
(Must be 21 or older to enter).
|
|
Click here to read the guide for
Alphabet
Weekends.
| |
|
FAMILY TREE by Barbara
Delinsky |
|
Dana
Clarke always has longed for the stability of home and
family --- her own childhood was not an easy one. Now
she has married a man she adores who is from a prominent
New England family, and she is about to give birth to
their first child. But what should be the happiest day
of her life becomes the day her world falls apart. Her
daughter is born beautiful and healthy, but no one can
help noticing the African American traits in her
appearance. Dana's husband, to her great shock and
dismay, begins to worry that people will think Dana has
had an affair.
Barbara Delinsky's Family Tree is an utterly
unforgettable novel that asks penetrating questions
about race, family, and the choices people make in times
of crisis --- choices that have profound consequences
that can last for generations.
|
|
Click here to read the guide for Family
Tree.
| |
|
LIPSHITZ 6, OR TWO ANGRY BLONDES
by T.
Cooper |
|
Upon
landing at Ellis Island in 1903, Esther and Hersh
Lipshitz discover their son Reuven is missing. The child
is never found, and decades later, Esther becomes
convinced that the famous aviator Charles Lindbergh is
her lost boy. Esther's manic obsession spirals out of
control, leaving far-reaching effects on the entire
Lipshitz lineage. In the present, we meet T Cooper ---
the last living Lipshitz --- who struggles to make sense
of all that came before him and what legacy he might
leave behind.
|
Click here to read the guide
for Lipshitz 6, or Two Angry
Blondes.
| |
|
RASPUTIN'S DAUGHTER by Robert
Alexander
|
|
From
the author of the breakout bestseller The
Kitchen Boy, a new novel delving into the
mysterious life and death of the notorious Rasputin.
With the same riveting historical narrative that made
The Kitchen Boy a national bestseller
and a book-club favorite, Robert Alexander returns to
revolutionary Russia for the harrowing tale of
Rasputin's final days as told by his youthful and bold
daughter, Maria.
With
Rasputin's Daughter, Robert
Alexander once again delivers an imaginative and
compelling story, fashioned from one of history's most
fascinating characters who, until now, has been
virtually unexplored in fiction.
This title has a
special Registered Book Club Opportunity being offered.
For details click here. |
Click here to read the guide
for Rasputin's Daughter.
| |
|
Featured Viking Flights of Fiction
Title: THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL by Elif
Shafak |
|
Nineteen-year-old Asya, like many teenagers, is full
of rage. Feeling like an outsider in a family of
suffocating women, she rebels against everything she
thinks her family and culture expect from her. Born and
raised in Istanbul, Turkey, Asya is the youngest female
of the Kazancý family.
Shafak has created an intricately woven tale about
the very different but equally difficult struggles of
living with the past and trying to survive without one.
Full of bold, unforgettable characters, The Bastard of Istanbul
reveals that even the worst events are important
ingredients in the recipes that make each of us who we
are.
-Click here to read more about Viking's
Flights of Fiction
series. |
|
Click here to read the guide for The
Bastard of
Istanbul.
| |
|
PATRIOT HEARTS by Barbara
Hambly |
|
When
Martha Dandridge Custis marries her second husband,
George, she never suspects that the soft-spoken Virginia
planter is destined to command the founding of a nation
--- or that she is to be "Lady Washington," the woman at
the first President's side. Only a select inner circle
of women will know the cost of sharing a beloved man
with history...and each will draw strength from the
unique treasure given to them by a doomed
queen.
A
lushly written novel that traces the marriages tested by
the demands of love and loyalty, Patriot Hearts offers readers
a dazzling glimpse behind the scenes of a revolution,
from adversity and treachery to teatime strategies, as
four magnificent women shape a nation's future.
|
Click here to read the guide
for Patriot Hearts.
| |
|
Featured Viking Flights of Fiction
Title: PETROPOLIS by Anya
Ulinich |
|
In her stellar debut novel,
Russian émigré Anya Ulinich paints a vivid, beguiling,
and funny portrait of post-Soviet Russia and
turn-of-the-century America. Petropolis is a richly
layered and luminous emotional epic in the mode of great
Russian novels. From perpetually gray Asbestos 2 to the
shocking green lawns of Paradise Valley, Arizona, where
Sasha lands as a mail-order bride; from wealthy suburban
Chicago to the streets of Brooklyn, New York, Petropolis takes on
motherhood, religion, the promise of love, and
cross-cultural perplexity, all set against Sasha's
harrowing yet hilarious search for a place to call home.
The result is a magnificent work that will stand
alongside the likes of Gary Shteyngart's The
Russian Debutante's Handbook and Gish Jen's
Typical American in scope, immediacy,
and sheer talent.
-Click here to read more about Viking's
Flights of Fiction series. |
Click here to read the guide
for Petropolis.
| |
|
THE BEST
RECIPES IN THE WORLD by Mark
Bittman |
|
Mark Bittman traveled the world to
find and bring back the best recipes of home cooks from
44 countries. This bountiful collection of new, easy,
and ultra-flavorful dishes will add exciting new tastes
and cosmopolitan flair to your everyday cooking and
entertaining.
The Best Recipes in the World
is a perfect resource for book clubs that like to
coordinate what they're reading to the food they serve
at their meetings. Here are some suggestions for
regions, dishes and the books that go perfectly with
them.
Region:
Greece and Turkey Recipe:
Spanakopita: Cheese and Spinach
Pie Book: Middlesex
by Jeffrey Eugenides
Region:
Italy Recipe: Risotta alla
Milanese Book: Under the
Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes
Region:
Mexico Recipe: Pollo con Salsa
Verde: Chicken in Green Sauce Book:
The House of Spirits by Isabel
Allende |
Click here to read more about
The Best Recipes in the World.
| |
|
Featured Viking Flights of Fiction
Title: THE DEAD
FATHERS CLUB by Matt
Haig |
|
The plot may strike one as
oddly familiar. Following the premature death of his
beloved father, a young man is visited by the father's
ghost. The spirit urges the youth to take vengeance upon
a morally ambiguous uncle, who may have had a hand in
the father's death and who now has romantic designs on
the dead man's widow. Torn between loyalty to his father
and his moral obligations to the living, the young man
is plagued by indecision. Although he yearns to bring
peace to his father's soul by killing the apparent
murderer, he hesitates, wondering what kind of peace can
truly be won by giving the wheel of violence another
turn.
-Click here to read more about Viking's
Flights of Fiction series.
|
Click here to read the guide
for The Dead Fathers Club.
| |
|
IN THE COUNTRY OF MEN by Hisham
Matar |
|
This
complicated story of deception, pride, nationalism and
sacrifice is a searing portrait of Muammar Qaddafi's
Libya as viewed through the eyes of a nine-year-old boy.
Shortlisted for the 2006 Man Booker Prize, In the Country of Men is both
timely and poignant, and delivers an important message
that is likely to resonate deeply with readers the world
over.
-Click here to read our One to Watch Feature
for Hisham Matar on
Bookreporter.com.
|
Click here to read the guide
for In the Country of Men.
| |
|
|
|
Special Opportunities for Registered Book
Groups --- SIX New
Offers!!! |
|
This month we
have six very special opportunities for Registered Book
Groups. Our featured titles are The
Divide by Nicholas Evans, Eat, Pray,
Love by Elizabeth Gilbert, The Friday
Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs,
Rasputin's Daughter by Robert
Alexander, Red River by Lalita Tademy
and Savannah Breeze by Mary Kay
Andrews. Registered groups have the chance to win author
chats, free books and some other amazing prizes. Groups
that are registered by Thursday, February 15th will
receive our Registered Newsletter with all the details
for how to enter your group to
win.
-Click here to read all the details for our
special offers for Registered Book
Groups.
|
|
Click here to register your
group.
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Poll and Tip
|
Would you and your book club
ever travel to spend time with an author in the place
where his or her book is?
-Yes -No
-Not sure.
Which of the following would apply to
your group taking a trip like this? (Check as many as
apply.)
-We would only want to go places
we can drive to. -We would take a day trip. -We
would take an overnight trip. -We would travel
domestically. -We would travel internationally.
-Perhaps not all of our group members would go.
-We are not interested in meeting authors, but would
like to see literary sites. -Budget concerns
would influence our doing this. -We have already
taken literary-related trips. -This would not
be of interest to our group. -I do not belong to a
group.
-Click here to answer our
Poll.
Tip for
March This year the clocks change on
March 11th so think about reading a book with "time" in
the title: The Time Traveler's Wife,
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-Time, Love in the Time of
Cholera, or even Dickens' Hard
Times.
| |
Do you like what you see
here, and want to forward it to a friend? Then click our link
on the bottom of the page to do just that!
Happy
reading. We'll see you next month.
Don't forget to
visit our other websites from TheBookReportNetwork.com:
Bookreporter.com, AuthorsOnTheWeb.com, FaithfulReader.com,
AuthorYellowPages.com, Teenreads.com, and
Kidsreads.com.
Carol Fitzgerald
(Carol@bookreporter.com)
The Book Report Network 250
W. 57th Street - Suite 1228 New York, New York
10107 |
|
Oprah's Book Club Selection
Contest
Win Copies for your Book Group

This month's prize:
Dreams of Joy by Lisa See
Click here for more






|