Sunday, February 12, 2012

Which book should i pick for my book club?

i'm in a book club, and it's my turn to pick the next book. i'm looking for a relatively easy to read book (no thomas aquinas...). i like russian books like dostoyevsky, and tolstoy. i'm looking for something fiction. but whatever you recommend. any ideas?Which book should i pick for my book club?
The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova



Its a riveting tale of the real Vlad Dracula. A very interesting read, its will keep you on the edge of your seat and teach you a little history all at the same time.



For something a little lighter in pages you can try Running With Scissors (the book is way better than the movie) or Dry both are by Augusten Burroughs. Both are very good reads.
Here's the best books I've read lately...



The Memory Keeper's Daughter by Kim Edwards

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Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts

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Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold



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If you click on the links underneath each title and then scroll down you can read a summary of the books as well as user and critical reviews.Which book should i pick for my book club?
You should pick something of Stephen King he is really good but chose his old stuff is better.
The English Patient





Or perhaps a Vonnegut novel (In memory of a great author) - perhaps, Dead Eye DickWhich book should i pick for my book club?
The Secret Garden
Balm of Gilead by Marilynn Robinson. Brilliant, poignant, and very thought-provoking. Good luck!
If you want to get a good discussion going on in the club, Harry Potter is a great idea. Or if the members like fantasy sorts, I'd recommend Lord of the Rings, Eragon or Narnia. For an easy-to-read history book, you might like to choose one of the Horrible Histories series. They're easy to understand, and there's lots of jokes and stuff inside, which makes it more vivid and fun. You can also try simple classics like Daddy-Long-Legs, or Black Beauty. I don't know about Russian books, so I can't help you much with that. Just go into a library or bookshop, and you'd find loads of good books for your club there.
The Westing Game-a mystery
Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson (Paperback)

by Mitch Albom (Author) "The last class of my old professor's life took place once a week in his house, by a window in the study. . ."



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"Infidel" by Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Ali tells her life story growing up in Somali, Saudi Arabia and Kenya under the brutal world of Islam. This book is very timely, powerful and an amazing insight into a critically important issue in the world today ... Islamic fundamentalism. Ali will break your heart with her story and inspire you with her courage.



Best wishes and good luck.
I think "Wild Fire" is a great thriller. It's by Nelson DeMille and I believe it is in paperback now.
one hundred years of solitude by gabriel garcia marquez
"The Stranger" by Albert Camus is a quick little existentialist work of the mid 1900's that functions at the physical and existential levels with a girth of enjoyment coming from the realization of the two stories in parallel, though some people are able to discover the third. Also, "A Brave New World" is a really fun light read that always sparks discussion no matter who is in your book club and it is always good for a laugh, or a cry, depending on how you perceive the message.
Dean Koontz "The Face". I know, you are thinking Dean Koontz? Something serious please! But that was really one of the best books I have ever read. It is the character development and the ending which are so powerful. I even cried at the end...it's one of those books that stays with you long after you have read it.
"The Codex" by Douglas Preston. Old Man Broadbent made a fortune by plundering tombs of the Incas any Mayans. All that is left is a video tape message for his sons. The tape reveals the he is dying and has decided to be buried with all his worldly treasures; if the sons want any inheritance they will have to plunder their father's tomb. Good luck finding it... This is an exciting thriller which draws on the author's experience working for the National History Museum.



"Good Behavior" by Donald Westlake is a fun light read. Down-on-his-luck thief John Dortmunder is looking for a place to hide. Given few options, he enters a convent via the roof and gets stuck in the rafters. The sisters think he might be the answer to their prayers. Can Dortmunder return the favor of their silence and steal a nun back for them? Given that the missing nun's father is an obsessive industrialist that has just hired an army to invade a country, the timing might not be in Dortmunder's favor. Relying on his usual crew of cronies: the light-fingered Andy Kelp, get-away-driver Stan Merch and man-mountain Tiny Bulcher; Dortmunder had better hope they can get time off for "Good Behavior."
I'm reading Cold Mountain right now and it is one of the most beautifully written books I've ever read.
How about Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman. Or, The Bright Forever by Lee Martin. I just read that one for my book club and it was very interesting. Plus, it is pretty easy to read and not too awful long.
pride and prejudice. its a great book, and even though it has big words, its still easy to understand.
This has nothing to do with Russia

But I read a book called "Bee Season" by Myla Golderg that any lover of words should read. It is an excellent family drama with a twist!
Catch 22 is a good book club book... I really like the book The Coldest Winter Ever by Sister Souljah because it is very easy to read (no hard vocabulary) but there is a lot of good debate material for a book club.

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