Bibliophilly

Philly book club extraordinaire run by a benevolent dictator of the written word.

Name:
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Hum, wouldn't you like to know.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Monday May 23rd, next meeting and book choices

May's book pick is:


I'm a Stranger Here Myself- Bill Bryson - 288 pages - 1999

June's book is:

sputnik sweetheart - haruki murakami - 224 pages

Location:TBA

May 23rd at 6:15

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Next meeting, April 25th and book choices

Just a reminder, the book club is meeting on Monday on April 25th at 6:15. Here are the book choices for the next two months. Pick one from each person's list.

Happy Reading . . .

Brianna's Choices


My House in Umbria-William Trevor - 160 pages

Mrs. Emily Delahunty-a mysterious and not entirely trustworthy former madam-quietly runs a pensione in the Italian countryside and writes romance novels while she muses on her checkered past. Then one day her world is changed forever as the train she is riding in is blown up by terrorists. Taken to a local hospital to recuperate, she befriends the other survivors-an elderly English general, an American child, and a German boy-and takes them all to convalesce at her villa, with unforeseen results.

I'm a Stranger Here Myself- Bill Bryson - 288 pages - 1999
I'm a Stranger Here Myself unleashes a new Bryson, more contemplative and less likely to toss daggers. After two decades in England, he's relocated to Hanover, New Hampshire. In this collection (drawn from dispatches for London's Night & Day magazine), he's writing from home, in close proximity to wife and family. We find a happy marriage between humor and reflection as he assesses life both in New England and in the contemporary United States. With the telescopic perspective of one who's stepped out of the American mainstream and come back after 20 years, Bryson aptly holds the mirror up to U.S. culture, capturing its absurdities--such as hotlines for dental floss, the cult of the lawsuit, and strange American injuries such as those sustained from pillows and beds. "In the time it takes you to read this," he writes, "four of my fellow citizens will somehow manage to be wounded by their bedding."

Breakfast of Champions- Kurt Vonnegut- 320 pages


Breakfast of Champions is a slippery, lucid, bleakly humorous jaunt through (sick? inhumane?) America circa 1973, with Vonnegut acting as our Virgil-like companion. The book follows its main character, auto-dealing solid-citizen Dwayne Hoover, down into madness, a condition brought on by the work of the aforementioned Kilgore Trout. As Dwayne cracks, then crumbles, Breakfast of Champions coolly shows the effects his dementia has on the web of characters surrounding him. It's not much of a plot, but it's enough for Vonnegut to air unique opinions on America, sex, war, love, and all of his other pet topics--you know, the only ones that really count.

Chris's choices

the mysteries of pittsburgh- michael chabon - 1989 - 304 pages

This is a book about the first summer after college, an improbable time dizzying and dazzling in promised freedom, a time of bright hope for the future, when many of us decide who we will or will not be.It tells the story of Art Bechstein, the son of a Jewish mobster as he graduates from college and enters the world of adults. The cast characters are diverse and intriguing and you understand completely why Art would fall madly in love with them.

still life with woodpecker- tom robbins - 288 pages

Still Life with Woodpecker is sort of a love story that takes place inside a pack of Camel cigarettes. It reveals the purpose of the moon, explains the difference between criminals and outlaws, examines the conflict between social activism and romantic individualism, and paints a portrait of contemporary society that includes powerful Arabs, exiled royalty, and pregnant cheerleaders. It also deals with the problem of redheads.

sputnik sweetheart - haruki murakami - 224 pages

The narrator is a teacher whose only close friend is Sumire, an aspiring young novelist with chronic writer's block. Sumire is suddenly smitten with a sophisticated businesswoman and accompanies her love object to Europe where, on a tiny Greek island, she disappears "like smoke." The schoolteacher hastens to the island in search of his friend. And there he discovers two documents on her computer, one of which reveals a chilling secret about Sumire's lover.