Sunday, February 5, 2012

How do you start a book club? Mothers and daughters please read!?

My Mother and I want to start a book club for mothers and daughter at my school. We don't know exactly how to start one or what books to read. Anyone who has done this before please answer!How do you start a book club? Mothers and daughters please read!?
To start the club, I would recommend getting a friend or two and their mothers interested as well, and then approach your school librarian or English teacher about it to see if it can be done through the school or not. Alternatively, visiting your local library to see if there's anything similar would also be a good idea. If you can't meet through the school, setting up a meeting place to discuss books, like at in a library setting, coffee shop, or someone's home, would be simple enough. Word of mouth could get more people involved. I know of book clubs that meet at the library, as well as others that meet in the home of a volunteer host.



As to what books to read, most schools have a reading programs through the library with books recommended (based on reading levels) for the students (White Pine comes to mind). Your school librarian could probably make suggestions for you. Otherwise, once you have a small group together and you've decided when to meeet (once a month maybe?), each mother/daughter could take turns suggesting a title to read. That way you get a variety, and everyone will have a chance to read something they're interested in.



Good luck! :-)How do you start a book club? Mothers and daughters please read!?
what a great idea!I don't know your age, but assuming you are between 12 and 16, here are some book suggestions.



The Joy Luck Club

The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants

Little Women

The Blue Bottle Club

Girl of the Limberlost

A Room of My Own

All The Way Home



All of these deal with mother and daughter relationshipsHow do you start a book club? Mothers and daughters please read!?
It would help to know how old the daughters will be. I would say start with some classics and maybe team up with a local bookstore like Barnes %26amp; Noble or Borders (So much the better if you have a locally owned %26amp; operated one, but they're rare these days) for recommendations or a book club format. Anything school related must be deemed age appropriate I would think, so maybe check with Scholastic Books or your school's librarian, too. Good luck! Sounds like fun!
That's wonderful, you might also want to try a craft making day.



if everyone has internet, groups.yahoo.com is free, and you can manage your club easy; give updates, make it a vote for the next book...give dates...etc...



You can even keep people out who don't belong.



Note: never give address, numbers, your location or your personal Info. on the internet. (I'm sure you already know this)



You can even have a day when you give safety tips...

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Book Club Journal

by Martha Rosen, Jo Gershman (Illustrator)



From the Publisher

You're never alone when you have a book, especially when you're a member of a book club! All you need to know about starting your own club, or joining one that already exists. Replete with lists of prize-winning fiction and non-fiction, quotations, and journal pages to record notes. Contains 160 pages measures 6-1/4" x 8-1/4", Wire-o binding (allows journal to lie flat while open).



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Book: Recipe for a Book Club: A Monthly Guide for Hosting Your Own Reading Group



Author: Mary O'Hare, Rose Storey



From the Publisher

Unlike other basic reading group guides, "Recipe for a Book Club" combines good eating with good reading for the millions of Americans who participate in book clubs."Recipe for a Book Club" starts in January and ends in December, with a reading theme for each month and a menu and recipes to go with it, a featured favorite book and author, suggested reading list, and interesting questions to ponder and discuss.



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Book: Girl Group Confidential: The Ultimate Guide to Starting, Running, and Enjoying Your Own Women's Group

Author: Jennifer Worick



From the Publisher

Our grandmothers may have had their quilting bees and our mothers their bridge clubs, but somewhere along the way, women's lives just got too busy to "get together with the girls." And that's a shame, because women have always forged unique relationships that support, educate, encourage, and inspire. But in recent years, the tide has turned and, more than ever, women are getting together to knit, to taste wine, to play poker, to discuss books, to play mah-jongg, to scrapbook, to pray . . .



Girl Group Confidential is the first book to describe how to start a women's group-and how to keep it running well. Bestselling New York Times author Jennifer Worick draws on the advice of women's group leaders across the country to create this nuts-and-bolts handbook. She covers both the practical (where and when to meet, setting up rules, dealing with friction among members) and the social (suggestions for refreshments and background music, arranging for speakers and field trips). Also included is information on club financials, how to incorporate, and even how to trademark your group's name. No matter what group you belong to, or want to belong to, Girl Group Confidential shows women how to optimize female gatherings and make the experience rich and rewarding.



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