Saturday, March 28, 2009

Book Donations



Hello Everyone!

The Braintree Thayer Public Library will be having it's annual book sale in May. My family is very involved with the library, all us being "Friends of the Library" and donating our time. My mother is one of the organizers of the book sale. If you have any gently used books, dvd's, video's you don't want, please bring them into work and I will bring them to the sale.

Thank You! Ali

http://www.thayerpubliclibrary.org/friends.html

Monday, March 23, 2009

Hi everyone - I've requested the latest book from my library and will give it a go at reading. Of course, I have done this with 2 of the past books on the list and have not gotten past the first chapter, so no promises will I make. I heard about another book at church this weekend called Amish Grace and it intrigues me, so I have also requested that from the library. If I make it through the book by some miracle, I'll let the group know what I thought, in case anyone else wants to read it. Looking forward to keeping up with the blog! - Jean

Cataloging our Books

http://books.livingsocial.com/people/1709811162

Hello All!

I am attempting to create a page for us to catalog our books....this is proving to be a little difficult. I use living social on Facebook. So, I created another account for Waiting For Transport. Hopefully, I will be able to permently link the URL.... Until then, please click on the link above to see the site.

Thanks!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

thanks

Hi all--just want to say I love having this blog. I hope we(meaningAli) can figure out how to have a list of books we read and a list of future candidates. As with so many other things in life,I hear a recommendation or remember a book i"ve wanted to read and because I don't have a good way to keep these little tid-bits,they go by the wayside.The pad of paper beside the computer is only good for so long and then my joy of purging overpowers my joy of lists. If it was on the blogsite it could stay forever. Also would like to suggest for the group the idea of reading a classic.At least once a year. I've heard a classic defined as"a book everyone quotes,but no one's read" I'm guilty of this for sure,and would like to get one read. Any ideas? Can't think of one right now,of course except War and Peace--and that doesn't sound appealing. Maybe a greek tragedy or James Joyce...Anyway, all for now. Monica

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Attention Book Club Members

We have Barnes and Noble Coupons for 30% off our current selection: Moloka'i. Several coupons have been printed out and are available at work. Coupon expires March 23,2009. If you would like a coupon emailed to you, contact Alison.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Support Local Libraries:

Westwood Public Library Annual Book Sale

Friday, Mar 20 10:00a /Sat. Mar 21 10:00a


Westwood Public Library Annual Book Sale. This annual sale of adult and children books, CDs, DVDs, and audiotapes helps support the many programs offered at both the Main and Branch Libraries. Sponsored by the Friends of the Westwood Public Library.
Price: Free to the public
Phone: (781) 326-7562
Westwood Public Library Annual Book Sale.

Apologize, Apologize! Future book club selection?

Elizabeth Kelly’s début, Apologize, Apologize!, is jarringly lovable, alternately hilarious and heartbreaking, and, afterward, challenging to talk about: a perfect book club book.



The story is told in the first person by Collie Flanagan, the "good boy" in a family of ne’er-do-much weirdos living on Martha’s Vineyard in the dilapidated luxury they can easily afford thanks to Boston grandfather Peregrine Lowell, aka the Falcon.Collie – his mother named him after a dog in an Albert Payson Terhune book ("at Andover they called me Lassie") — is a year older than his flamboyant brother Bing (named for an Irish setter). "It could have been worse; she could have called us Sacco and Vanzetti.""Why can’t you just do what you’re supposed to do?" Collie rails when Bing is kicked out of yet another New England prep school. Back home, Mom is a do-gooder who does little good; Dad is a pontificating drunk; bachelor Uncle Tom races pigeons; while wall-to-wall dogs snore in every room of the house. It ain’t easy to be normal.Many bildungsromans feature an eccentric, "difficult" hero trying to navigate the calm waters of a "normal" family (or world).



This novel turns that scenario upside down: "normal" Collie seeks a path to conventional success, all the while secretly wishing he had a little of the magic Bing possesses. "There was no magic in me." The novel bumps along from set piece to set piece as family antics erupt … until a horrific accident takes place, tearing Collie’s world apart. The narrative then finds its heart in Collie’s quest for a ManPlan — and, perhaps, for redemption. His quest takes him far and wide — to South America, to Ireland, to a new (and potentially dangerous) career. "Does anyone," he asks, "ever make a sensible decision?" Do the stories we present to the world ever correspond to the stories we tell ourselves?Funny, sometimes shocking, this astonishingly readable and memorable first novel contains disasters great and small, poignant introspection, the antics of dogs and pigeons and the fierce and tender bonds of love.



Elizabeth Kelly is an author to watch. And, once again, it’s a perfect book for a book club. May the fur fly!

Review By Ann La Farge

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The NWH PACU book club is pleased to announce Moloka'i as the new selection. We will meet May 31st at 6pm.
Molaka'i:
This richly imagined novel, set in Hawai'i more than a century ago, is an extraordinary epic of a little-known time and place---and a deeply moving testament to the resiliency of the human spirit.Rachel Kalama, a spirited seven-year-old Hawaiian girl, dreams of visiting far-off lands like her father, a merchant seaman. Then one day a rose-colored mark appears on her skin, and those dreams are stolen from her. Taken from her home and family, Rachel is sent to Kalaupapa, the quarantined leprosy settlement on the island of Moloka'i. Here her life is supposed to end---but instead she discovers it is only just beginning. With a vibrant cast of vividly realized characters, Moloka'i is the true-to-life chronicle of a people who embraced life in the face of death. Such is the warmth, humor, and compassion of this novel that "few readers will remain unchanged by Rachel's story".