Wednesday, May 01, 2013

April BookClub

It was my turn to host this month's bookclub. I decided on quiche and salad for lunch on a sunny saturday afternoon. It was a great turnout with only two bookclubbers missing due to family occasions. We enjoyed a lovely afternoon catching up. The book up for discussion was 'How We Met' by Katy Regan. It was generally thought to be predictable and an average read. K brought some lovely cupcakes from Avoca as we missed Adrienne’s fairy buns. Our miniest bookclubber was in flying form after this particular sugar hit! Lisa also shared her good news with us that another bookclub baby is due in October.
We decided to go with Debs suggestion of reading a classic book and Amers suggested  ‘The Great Gatsby’ as the movie remake is due out soon.
The Great Gatsby is a novel by American author F. Scott Fitzgerald. The story takes place in 1922, during the Roaring Twenties, a time of prosperity in the United States after World War I. All the bright young things go to Jay Gatsby's Long Island parties. Yet Gatsby himself is reserved and mysterious. He seems always to be waiting for something or someone. When he finally draws the beautiful Daisy Buchanan back into his orbit, he sets in motion a series of tragedies. And F. Scott Fitzgerald gives us what many consider to be the greatest American novel - a crystalline portrait of a society captivated by status and ambition, and a man doomed in love.
Taken from:
Google Books
From the uniquely imaginative mind of writer/producer/director Baz Luhrmann comes the new big screen adaptation of F Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby. In his adaptation, the filmmaker combines his distinctive visual, sonic, and storytelling styles in three dimensions, weaving a Jazz Age cocktail faithful to Fitzgerald's text and relevant to now. Leonardo DiCaprio stars in the title role. Judging from his last movie Moulin Rouge, we are in for a treat. Amers is going to host the next bookclub and perhaps we may even have a bookclub movie outing too.

Happy Reading!

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

World Book Night: April 23rd


Today Tuesday 23rd April is World Book Night. The 23rd April is a symbolic date in the literary world. On this day in 1616, Miguel de Cervantes, Willian Shakespeare and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega all died. Since 1995, the UNESCO World Book Day is celebrating reading and publishing on 23rd April. World Book Night encourages people to discover the joy of reading a good book. It is a celebration of reading and books which sees tens of thousands of volunteers gift specially chosen and printed books in their communities to share their love of reading.

Learn more about it on their website:
http://www.worldbooknight.org/

Some free events scheduled to take part tonight as part of the World Book Night include:

Milk and Cookies Bookswap
18.30, Tues 23 Apr
Chocolate Factory,
26 King's Inn Street, Dublin 1


In honour and in the spirit of World Book Night, Milk & Cookies is organising a BOOKSWAP!
Are your bookshelves overflowing with tomes you've read a thousand times? Do you have an intense love for finding new ones? And are you looking for that rarest of gems - an old classic that's new to you?

Then sack up your books and haul them on down to the Chocolate Factory for an evening of sweets, stories and softcover swapping! There will be someone at The Chocolate Factory from 2pm to accept donations and doors for the swap open at 6:30pm.

https://www.facebook.com/events/451209288291305

Brooks Loves Books
18:30 - 20:00, Tue 23 Apr
Brooks Hotel, Drury Street, Dublin 2

Brooks Hotel is supporting World Book Night by hosting a free literary event - Brooks Loves Books - in the hotel.

The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry is Brooks' book of choice for World Book Night on 23 April and there will be readings from the book by actor Jim Roche as well a selection of music from Brooks’ pianist in the Café Lounge from 18:30.

Admission is free.

http://www.brookshotel.ie/


Happy World Book Night to you all!

One City One Book 2013: Strumpet City


Every year Dublin City Public Libraries and Dublin UNESCO City of Literature pick a Dublin-focused book for One City One Book. Then, throughout the month of April, cafes and bars around the city host fun free shows, readings and events to celebrate this book. The book chosen for 2013 is "Strumpet City" by James Plunkett. Set in Dublin during the Lockout of 1913, Strumpet City is a panoramic novel of city life. It embraces a wide range of social milieux, from the miseries of the tenements to the cultivated, bourgeois Bradshaws. The aim is to encourage reading a historic book and try to bring it to life through these events.

Previous books included "Dubliners" by James Joyce in 2012, "Ghost Light" by Joseph O'Connor in 2011, "The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde in 2010, "Dracula" by Bram Stoker in 2009 and "Gulliver's Travels" by Jonathan Swift in 2008.

To learn more and view a listing of events check out the website:
http://www.dublinonecityonebook.ie/

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

DLR Library Voices: Spring 2013


There is a stunning line up for the Spring series of dlr Library Voices, we have read three out of the four authors in this very bookclub. Curated by Bert Wright, this is the fifth year of this groundbreaking series featuring bestselling national and international authors. All events take place in the Pavilion Theatre, Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire. Tickets €10 & €8 concessions



Kate Atkinson In Conversation with Sinead Gleeson: Sunday 24th March at 2.30pm
Kate Atkinson was one of the stars of the 2010 Mountains to Sea Book Festival and we’re delighted to welcome her back to Dún Laoghaire. Already garnering rave advance notices, her new novel, Life After Life, poses the intriguing question, What if you had the chance to live your life again and again, until you finally got it right? Here is Kate Atkinson at her most profound and inventive, in a novel that celebrates the best and worst of ourselves. Whether on the page or on the stage, Kate Atkinson is a delight. Don’t miss her.

Douglas Kennedy In Conversation with Nadine O’Regan: Tuesday April 9th at 8.00pm

Douglas Kennedy ranks among that rare breed, the bestselling author whose novels attract critical praise. His previous novels include massive bestsellers such as The Big Picture, The Pursuit of Happiness, A Special Relationship and The Moment. In his new novel, Five Days, we meet Laura, a model wife and mother who through a chance meeting in a hotel lobby is reminded of the young woman she used to be and the woman she could have become. Five Days is a compelling novel about how life can change with one brief encounter.


Audrey Niffenegger In Conversation with Mia Gallagher: Friday 31st May at 8.00pm

The Time Traveler’s Wife, Audrey Niffenegger’s talismanic first novel sold more than two million copies and became the quintessential book club choice. Her second novel, Her Fearful Symmetry, sparked a feverish auction among the major world publishing houses and went on to become another bestseller. Now comes Raven Girl which opens with the memorable line “ Once there was a Postman who fell in love with a Raven …” Niffenegger, one of the world’s most audacious and inventive storytellers, has created a dark fairytale full of wonderment and longing. Illustrated with her own bewitching etchings and paintings, Raven Girl explores the bounds of transformation and possibility.

Jeffery Deaver In Conversation with John Connolly : Tuesday 25th June at 8.00pm

Jeffery Deaver is the creator of the critically-acclaimed Lincoln Rhyme series and the award-winning author of 29 internationally bestselling thrillers, including the recent James Bond novel Carte Blanche. In The Kill Room, brilliant criminologist and quadriplegic Lincoln Rhyme returns to investigate the state-sanctioned killing of a US citizen who is suspected of planning a terrorist attack on a US oil company. Deaver’s trademark suspense, richly developed characters and left-field plot twists mark him out as the consummate thriller writer. Don’t miss this rare chance to hear one of the world’s most successful thriller-writers talking about his work with Ireland’s leading crime writer, John Connolly.

For further details and to check out the programme, click on the link below:
http://www.dlrcoco.ie/library/spring_voices_2013.htm

Tuesday, March 05, 2013

First Bookclub of 2013

Our first bookclub of 2013 was held last Saturday hosted by the domestic goddess that is Shinners. We were supposed to meet in February but the date was rescheduled as baby Adam was poorly. The book under discussion was ‘How to Talk to a Widower’ by Jonathan Tropper. All agreed it was a good read and it looks like our new year’s resolution is holding fast as most of us had read the book. Long may that last! I especially liked the part about the bunnies.
Lots of good news since 2012 with new houses, new jobs and new babies on the way, 2013 is already looking busy and getting off to a good start for some. Shinners had a lovely spread of homemade sausage rolls, salads and had been baking up a storm including a Swedish apple cake and a carrot cake. We all asked for the recipes. And of course Adrienne brought her by now infamous and obligatory fairy buns. We had a lovely afternoon of lovely food, company and conversation. It was a small get together as Amers had jetted off to Madrid, Li was sick, Debs dropped by for a short visit and being between e-mails and changing jobs poor K was out of the loop and had missed the rescheduled date.

So the next book is, Debs suggestion, How We Met by Katy Regan.

Summary: A contemporary story of love, friendship and grief, told with Katy's inimitable laugh-out-loud humour, poignancy and heart.
There are some people you can’t imagine life without.
Liv Jenkins had been meticulously planning her ultimate to-do list – from the outrageous to sensible – of everything she longed to do before her dreaded thirtieth birthday, but when tragedy struck she never got the chance…
Two years later, Liv’s five closest friends have come together on the anniversary of her death and have made a pact: they will complete Liv’s to-do list in tribute to her memory.
Over the next year, before what would’ve been Liv’s thirtieth birthday, her friends set out to complete the tasks. But along the way deeply buried secrets, silent guilt, unrequited love and years of lies, rise to the surface rocking their friendships.
When they reach the end of Liv’s list the final task shakes the group to their core and they realise that they must face their futures and the consequences of their pasts, and with Liv’s help, live the lives they have always dreamed of.

Taken from: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15847922-how-we-met

Happy Reading!

Monday, January 07, 2013

Ennis Bookclub Festival: March 1-3

The Ennis Bookclub Festival has been announced for 2013. The Ennis Book Club Festival is a terrific social and literary gathering bringing together book club members and readers from Ireland and beyond. The festival is supported by Clare County Library and includes author readings, discussions, workshops and walking tours through the narrow streets and lanes of Ennis. We offer sessions on running book clubs, advice on reading lists, poetry, events as Gaeilge, and an opportunity to compare notes and meet with other readers. Combine your love of reading with a great weekend away!

In honour of the Gathering 2013, there is going to be the first Giant Book Club Gathering:

It will be take place on Friday the 1st of March and will be hosted by acclaimed Irish author Joseph O'Connor where he novel Star of the Sea will be discussed.

Summary:
This brooding historical fiction chronicles the mayhem aboard the Star of the Sea, a leaky old sailing ship crossing from Ireland to New York during the bitter winter of 1847, its steerage crammed to the bulkheads with diseased and starving refugees from the Irish potato famine. Amongst the passengers are a maidservant with a devastating secret, bankrupt Lord Merridith and his family, an aspiring novelist and a maker of revolutionary ballads. All in search of a new home in the Promised land, each is yet connected more deeply than they can possibly know... and a camouflaged killer is stalking the decks, hungry for vengeance and absolution. The novel takes the form of a personal account written by passenger G. Grantley Dixon, a New York Times reporter who intersperses his narrative with reportage and interviews as he describes the intrigue that unfolds during the 26-day journey.



Authors and speakers for 2013 include: Marina Lewycka, John Banville, Joseph O'Connor, the BBC's Fergal Keane, Michael Harding, Conor Brady, Mary O'Rourke, Aine Lawlor, Brian Lucey, Belinda Jack, Michael Smith, Royal Shakespeare Company's Education Department, Elaine Byrne, Tony Curtis, Dennis O'Driscoll, Margaret Hickey, Kate Bateman, Anne McCabe, and Clare Three Legged Stool Poets. Check out the complete Festival Programme on the website. The full programme and ticket booking will be available towards the end of January.

Christmas Bookclub

This year’s Christmas bookclub was held on Friday 28th December in Brasserie 66. It was a lovely ending to a fabulous book-filled year full of Christmas cheer and high jinks. The book this time was The Cutting Season by Attica Locke. Those who had read the book found it slow-moving. We all went for their delightful Christmas menu which was good value at 33 for a starter, main course and dessert. The food was delicious and they offered a choice of either dessert or a Christmas cocktail. Many of us partook of the cocktail. Debs gave us all a lovely gift of homemade face cream made from meadowsweet she collected on our bookclub away trip in the summer. We also had the first bookclub awards where everyone received an award certificate and we each made a speech. All awards were courtesy of Billy Bear and the following were presented:

Val received the Good Conduct Award. She would also have won best attendance if she had bothered to show up – only kidding we know she was ill! I got the doctors cert to prove it!

Adrienne was presented with the Teddy Bear Award. Also if there was an award for best buns, Adrienne would have also won this as her fairy cakes are legendary. She is also our newest member.

Trish received the Computer Whizz Award for keeping the blog going single-handedly, not that anyone reads it! Ironically as most people know I am also the technophobe amongst us but am still surpassing Debs on this score, just about as she is catching up fast!

Amers was presented with the Outstanding Reader Award. She is our little bookclub swot, every bookclub needs one!

Shinners won the Helping Hands Award. She is also our newest mammy and one of our founding members.

Debs received the Happy Face Award. She was also contender of best storyteller – can anyone forget her been stung by a swarm of bees story?

Ciara got the Shining Star Award. She is also our best/only overseas/international member

Lisa was presented with the Playing Well with Others Award. She is also a fellow technophobe!

Kathryn received the Bright Idea Award. I was running out of ideas/valid categories at this point! Although she could also have won best attendance or best organiser if Billy Bears had some foresight.

Everyone also wins Hostess with the Mostess awards – there wasn’t enough to go around!

So onto another year, 2013 beckons and the next book up for discussion is How to Talk to a Widower by Jonathan Tropper:

Summary:
A portrait of a modern guy in crisis, Tropper's third novel (Everything Changes; The Book of Joe) follows Doug Parker, whose life is frozen into place at 29 when Hailey, his wife of two years, is killed in a plane crash. Unable to leave the tony suburban house they once shared, he spends his days reliving their brief marriage from the moment he found her sobbing in his office over troubles with her first husband. At the same time, Doug's magazine column about grieving for his wife has made him irresistible to the media (book deals, television spots and the like are proffered) and to a wide array of women who find him "slim, sad and beautiful." Though stepson Russ is getting in trouble at school and Doug's pregnant twin sister, Claire, moves in, no amount of crying to strippers can keep Doug from the temptations of his best friend's wife or Russ's guidance counselor. Alternately flippant and sad, Tropper's book is a smart comedy of inappropriate behavior at an inopportune time.
Additional Info from Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/How-Talk-Widower-Bantam-Discovery/dp/0385338910

The next bookclub date for your diaries will be Chez Harmo on Saturday 9th Feb for lunch (anytime time after 2pm) and maybe even some book chat.....depends on how good we've been adhering to our resolution to actually read the books this year.

Happy Reading and Happy New Year Bookclubbers!