Our All-Time Favorite Book Club Books

The following is a list of books that our book club has unanimously enjoyed and have made for interesting and lively discussions.

  1. Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood
  2. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon
  3. Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
  4. The Bone People by Keri Hulme
  5. The Cider House Rules by John Irving
  6. Fall On Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald
  7. Foxfire by Joyce Carol Oates
  8. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
  9. The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton
  10. The House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III
  11. Life of Pi by Yann Martel
  12. Lolita by Vladmir Nabakov
  13. A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving
  14. The River Why by David James Duncan
  15. She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb

Check out these titles for more book club suggestions

Book Club Cook Book

The Book Club Cook Book
by Judy Gelman and Vicki Levy Krupp

Year of Reading link

A Year of Reading
by Elisabeth Ellington

Book Lover's Cook Book Link

The Book of Great Books: A Guide to 100 World Classics
by W. John Campbell

Slice of Life Link

So Many Books, So Little Time: A Year of Passionate Reading
by Sara Nelson

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Our Book Club

Our book club has been meeting regularly since 1992. In that time, we've seen members come and go (and come back again), a few marriages, kids and various pets welcomed into our lives, new homes, new jobs and many other life changes. Book club has always been there as a refuge of sorts. Not only are our gatherings a time for us to share our common love of reading, but they also give us a chance to enjoy food, drink wine and catch up on each other's lives.

Check out the complete list of books that our club has had the pleasure of reading and discussing over the past years. Some being more of a pleasure than others, of course! Return often as we continue to archive our reviews and add the latest offerings that our book club has read. See a book in that list you've read? Add your review!

In the course of our meetings, many other great books have been suggested but not chosen. We've compiled a list of books that didn't make it the first time around, or that we've read on our own that would be great for book club discussions. Click here to see these other recommended books.

Click here to see Pulitzer Prize winners.
To see all the books profiled on Wuthering Bites, click here.
Click here for the complete list of authors on Wuthering Bites.


Starting Your Own Book Club

The following tips are courtesy of the Washington Center for the Book at the
Seattle Public Library and are reprinted with permission. Visit their site for more information and ideas for your book club: http://www.spl.org/default.asp?pageID=collection_discussiongroup.

Getting Started

You can find book discussion groups almost everywhere these days—in bookstores, community centers, private homes, online, and at libraries. While for some, reading is a solitary activity, many find their appreciation and pleasure of a book broadened and deepened through discussion.

Before (or at) your first meeting, discuss:

  • When, where and how often your book club will meet
  • How long each meeting will last
  • Will you serve refreshments
  • What is the role of the leader (or if you will have one)
  • Who develops the discussion questions
  • What types of books will you read and discuss

Choosing Good Books for Discussion

Good books for discussion have multidimensional characters who are forced to make difficult choices, often under difficult situations. They present the author's view of an important truth and sometimes send a message to the reader.

Books that are heavily plot driven, where the author spells out everything for the reader, leave little to discuss. Most mysteries, Westerns, romances and science fiction/fantasy fall in this category.

The following types of books can promote lively discussion:

Books that have ambiguous endings. For example, there is no consensus about what actually happened in Tim O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods, Sara Maitland's Ancestral Truths or James Buchan's The Persian Bride.

Books you read in pairs. These can be discussed at one meeting or read and discussed in successive months. Examples: A Dangerous Friend by Ward Just and The Quiet American by Graham Greene, The Hours by Michael Cunningham and Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, and The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver and King Leopold's Ghost by Adam Hochschild.

Books that raise many, many issues. Examples: A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest Gaines, The Sweet Hereafter by Russell Banks, House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III, and Girls by Frederick Busch.

Not every member will like every book the group chooses. Each member brings his or her own history, memories, and background to the reading of a book. All of these differences influence the reader's experience of a book.

Reading a Book for Discussion

Reading for a book discussion—whether you are the leader or a participant—differs from reading purely for pleasure. Asking questions, reading carefully, imagining yourself in the story, analyzing style and structure and searching for personal meaning in a work of literature all enhance the book's value and the discussion potential for your group.

Here are things to do and think about as you read:

Make notes and mark pages as you go. This may slow your reading, but saves time searching for important passages later.

Ask tough questions of yourself and the book. These can promote in-depth conversations with your group and make the book more meaningful.

Analyze themes. Consider the premise with which the author started.

Get to know characters. Consider their faults and motives and what it would be like to interact with them.

Notice the book's structure. Are chapters prefaced by quotes? How many narrators tell the story? Is the book written in flashbacks? Does the order the author chose make sense to you?

Compare to other books and authors. Themes often run through an author's works.

The Role of a Discussion Leader

Leading a book discussion requires preparation. These ideas can help leaders promote a good discussion:

  • Have 10-15 open-ended questions that can't be answered "yes" or "no." Or ask each group member to come with one discussion question.
  • Be ready to let the discussion flow naturally.
  • Push members beyond "I just didn't like it" statements. Have them describe what it was about the book that made it unappealing. Some of the best discussions are on books that inspire strong reactions, positive and negative.
  • Keep a balance in the discussion between members' personal revelations and a response to the book itself. If groups become sidetracked in reminiscences, it's no longer a book discussion.

Learning More About an Author

Discussion leaders may want to bring additional background about the author and book to a meeting. Some reference titles for researching authors are: Current Biography, Contemporary Authors, Something About the Author, The Dictionary of Literary Biography

You can find book reviews in Book Review Digest and Book Review Index. Look for these resources in your branch. The Internet is another good resource. editor's note: WutheringBites.com is also an excellent resource for book reviews and book club recommendations!

Coming Up With Good Discussion Questions

If you need help developing questions, these suggestions may help:

  • How does the title relate to the book?
  • How believable are the characters?
  • Which character do you identify with?
  • What makes the protagonist sympathetic, or unsympathetic?
  • Why do certain characters act the way they act? Does she have an ax to grind, a political ideology, religious belief, or psychological disorder?
  • What does the character mean when he says "..."?
  • How does the author use certain words and phrases differently than we would normally use them?
  • Does the author make up new words and, if so, why?
  • Are the plot and subplots believable and interesting?
  • What loose ends, if any, did the author leave?
  • How is the book structured? Flashbacks? Multiple points of view? Why do you think the author chose to write the book this way? How does the arrangement of the book help or detract from the ideas it contains?
  • What types of symbolism do you find in this novel?What do these objects really represent? How do characters react to and with these symbolic objects?
  • What themes—motherhood, self-discovery, wilderness—recur throughout the book?
  • How is the setting of the book important to the theme?

Drawing Conclusions

What is the great strength—or most noticeable weakness— of the book? What did the author attempt to do in the book? Was he or she successful?

Thinking Outside the Book

  • What is the author's worldview?
  • Does this book fit into or fight against a literary genre?
  • Does this book typify a regional (southern, western) novel?
  • Does the book address broader social issues?
  • Does the author take a stance on, for example, anarchy versus capitalism?
  • How is a particular culture or subculture portrayed?
  • Where could the story go after the book ends?
  • What is the future of these characters' lives?
  • What would our lives be like if we lived in this story?
  • How does this book compare to other books you've read?
  • Would it make a good movie? Is there a film adaptation of this book? What is brought out or played down in the film version?


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