Thursday, December 29, 2011

Land of Little Rain-Mary Austin

The 2nd Wednesday Book Group has chosen "Land of Little Rain" by Mary Austin as its next read.  We will meet on Wednesday, January 11th @ 1pm to discuss Austin's work.  This is Austin's first book and was published in 1903.  The book is available through Project Gutenberg, just click here to read it on your computer. 

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Ramona by Helen Hunt Jackson-December 14th @ 1 pm

We are reading "Ramona" by Helen Hunt Jackson for the next book group meeting.  We will be meeting in the Russell Room @ 1pm.  Available for free as a downloadable e-book from Project Gutenberg, "Ramona" is often compared to Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" for its attempt to influence social policy.

Several movies, as well as a TV series, were produced.  A clip from the D.W. Griffith production is available for viewing is available via YouTube 

Discussion questions for "Ramona" are available here in a handout made available by StoryLines America.  Please join us for what could be an interesting conversation!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

"Daughter of Fortune" by Isabel Allende November 9, 2011

Please join us for our next Falmouth Memorial Library Book Group meeting, Wednesday, November 9th @ 1pm.

Book Discussion Questions provided by the publisher:

1. Eliza thinks that the facts of her birth don't matter: "It is what you do in this world that matters, not how you come into it," she claims. Ta Ch'ien, on the other hand, cannot imagine "his own life apart from the long chain of his ancestors, who not only had given him his physical and mental characteristics but bequeathed him his karma. His fate, he believed, had been determined by the acts of his family before him." How do these different beliefs determine the way Tao Chi'en and Eliza make decisions about their lives? What are your own feelings about ancestry and self-determination?
2. Eliza grows up under the influence of a number of strong individuals--Mama Fresia, Rose, Jeremy Sommers and his brother, John. What does she learn from each of people? How do their differing philosophies contribute to Eliza's experience of the world? How do they shape her personality?
3. In 19th century Chile, a married woman could not travel, sign legal documents, go to court, sell or buy anything without her husband's permission. No wonder Rose doesn't want to get married! How would the lives of the women you know be different under those conditions? What are the consequences in a society that limits the freedoms of a segments of its citizens?
4. What do you think Allende means by referring to Eliza as a "daughter of fortune?" How are the different definitions of the word "fortune" significant in Eliza's story and the novel as a whole?
5. How is Tao Chi'en a "son" of fortune? What are the crucial turning points in his life, and where do they lead him? To what extent is he responsible for his own good and bad fortunes?
6. "At first the Chinese looked on the foreigners with scorn and disgust, with the great superiority of those who feel they are the only truly civilized beings in the universe, but in the space of a few years they learned to respect and fear them." writes Allende about the arrival of Western peoples into Hong Kong. How is this pattern of suspicion, fear, and resigned acceptance repeated throughout the novel? How does Allende illustrate the confusion of clashing cultures in Valparaiso, on board Eliza's ship, and in California? Do you think people of today are more tolerant of other cultures than they were 150 years ago?
7. While Eliza is vulnerable in California because of her sex, Tao Chi'en's prospects are limited because of his race. How do both characters overcome their "handicaps?" What qualities help them make their way in a culture that is foreign and often unwelcoming?
8. What do details such as Mama Fresia's home remedies and her attempts to "cure" Eliza of her love for Joaqu’n, or Tao Chi'en's medical education and his habit of contacting his dead wife say about the role of the spiritual in the everyday life? Must the spiritual and the secular remain separate? What about the spiritual and scientific worlds?
9. How have the novel's characters - Rose or Jacob Todd, for instance - managed to create opportunities out of the obstacles they've faced? What do you think Allende is saying about the role that fate plays in our lives, and about our capacity to take control over our own destinies? How are we all sons or daughters of fortune?

Friday, July 29, 2011

"The Thousand Mile Summer" by Colin Fletcher

Join us at 1pm on Wednesday, August 10th for a discussion of Colin Fletcher's "The Thousand Mile Summer"  In 1958 Fletcher, author of the well known, "The Complete Walker" walked the length of California and wrote our August selection about his adventures on the trail.

Fletcher was a well known backpacker who wrote about several of his treks through America. Fletcher was born in Wales in 1922 and died in California in 2007. 

Please join our discussion of Fletcher's experiences and how they translate onto the written page. This is just the beginning of our California Dreaming selections. 

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

A New Year!

It's a new year for the Falmouth Memorial Library Wednesday Book Group.  We start with a new selection of books on with our July meeting.  We met today to discuss Nevada Barr's  "High Country".  The theme for this year is California.  We are looking for new members to join anytime.  We meet the 2nd Wednesday of every month  Next month we will be reading Colin Fletcher's "The Thousand Mile Summer".  

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

"March to Quebec" by Kenneth Roberts

Our next 2nd Wednesday Book Group meeting will be Wednesday, June 8th at 1pm.  We are reading Maine author, Kenneth Roberts' book, "March to Quebec". 

Please join us. We're always looking for new members!

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Harriett Beecher Stowe---"Uncle Tom's Cabin"

We hope you will join us for the next meeting of our 2nd Wednesday of the Month book group!  We will be discussing "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe.  Although Stowe was born in Connecticut, she did move to Brunswick, Maine when her husband accepted a job at Bowdoin College. 

Check out the links to the right for additional biographical information on this widely praised writer.

Book Chat Cafe

We hope you will join us for our newest "book group", Book Chat Cafe.  We meet the 2nd Saturday of each month @ 10am.  There is no reading list.  Just bring a few of your more recent favorite reads and we'll chat about them!  I've already picked up three titles of books I want to read.

Our next meeting is Saturday, May 14th @ 10am.  We will be "playing" with your library's new e-readers!  Come see what all the excitement is about and meet others in our community who love to read and share.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

"Poets and Writers" Magazine

Your library has a wide variety of magazines available for check out. We've had  "Poets and Writers" magazine for a few years.  If you're interested in the art and craft of writing, stop by your library's Periodical Room.  "Poets and Writers" is published bimonthly and contains great articles about and for writers and poets.  Since the month of April is National Poetry Month, what better time than now to check out writing resources and start creating with words yourself.

Monday, March 7, 2011

April is Poetry Month--Remember to Bring Your Poem this week!

Next month's Book Group Meeting is all about Maine Poetry.  Please remember to bring a copy of the poem you've chosen to read in April to our March 9th meeting.  I will photocopy and distribute the poems to everyone at the March 9th meeting. 

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Another Book Group?

Yes, the Falmouth Memorial Library has started another book group which will meet on the Second Saturday of every month, @ 9:30am.  The next meeting will be Saturday, March 12th.

Where's the list?  What do I need to read?

No list, no required reading.  Drop by, grab a cup of coffee and a muffin and relax.  We'll talk about books, what we like to read and why.  We'll play around with some of the new e-readers.  Just basically ponder the written word, or the spoken word  for that matter.  Please join us.  What's a story without sharing it?

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

"Peyton Place" by Grace Metalious

Join us on Wednesday, March 9th at 1pm for our next Falmouth Memorial Book Group meeting.  We will be discussing the novel by Grace Metalious, "Peyton Place".  Check out the links to the right about Grace Metalious to see why this New Hampshire author is listed in our Maine Focus reading list! 

Monday, February 7, 2011

"The Country of the Pointed Firs" by Sarah Orne Jewett

Please join the Falmouth Memorial Library's Book Group as we discuss Sarah Orne Jewett's "The Country of the Pointed Firs". 

We meet every second Wednesday of each month @1pm.

This month we will also try fitting in some discussion of John Irving's "The Cider House Rules" as we were snowed out last month! 

Thursday, January 20, 2011

"A Short History of Portland"

Allan Levinsky, author of "A Short History of Portland" will be discussing his book at the Falmouth Memorial Library, on Friday, February 4th @ 1pm.  The FML Book Group is hosting this event for the library.  The public is more than welcome and refreshments will be served.  Please join us!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Today, Wednesday January 12th-The Library is Closed

The library is closed today due to the Northeaster whipping outside.  We hope all our patrons are home safe and warm.

Since the library is closed today, the Book Group will not be meeting to discuss "The Cider House Rules".  We will try and squeeze in a short discussion about the book next month when we meet again (weather permitting).
Next month we will be discussing Sarah Orne Jewett's book "The Country of  Pointed Firs".  Please join us.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

"The Cider House Rules" by John Irving

Join us on Wednesday, January 12th for the monthly book group.  This month group members are reading "The Cider House Rules" by John Irving.


Readers Guide questions made available by the publisher, Random House:


1. The rules posted on the cider house wall aren't read or understood by anyone living there except Mr. Rose, who makes -- and breaks -- his own set of rules. What point is John Irving making with the unread rules?
2. What rules, both written and unwritten, do other characters follow in the novel? Did most characters violate their own rules? Who stays the most true to his or her rules?
3. Dr. Larch makes the interesting statement that because women don't legally have the right to choose, Homer Wells does not have a moral claim in choosing not to perform abortions. Do you find Larch's argument compelling? Do you think Homer was ultimately convinced or that he needed an escape from Ocean View?
4. In order to set future events on what he believes to be the correct path, Larch alters the history of the orphanage to create a false heart murmur for Homer and changes various school transcripts to create Dr. Fuzzy Stone. What other doctoring of history does Larch do? Do you think Homer, as Dr. Fuzzy Stone, will continue the tradition?
5. St. Cloud's setting is grim, unadorned, and unhealthy, while Ocean View is healthy, wide open, and full of opportunities. In what ways do the settings of the orphanage and the orchards belie their effect on their residents? What did you make of Homer bringing the apple trees to St. Cloud's?
6. As you were reading, what did you expect Melony to do to Homer when she finally found him? Though Homer forgets about Melony for many years, do you think she had more of an impact on his future than Candy did?
7. Larch's introduction to sex comes through a prostitute and her daughter, and his introduction to abortion is given by the same women. Sex with Melony, the picture of the pony, and abortions performed by Larch introduces Homer to the same issues, yet Homer doesn't maintain sexual abstinence as Larch does. Why do you think this is? Do you think Larch substitutes ether for sex?
8. Violence against women forms a thread throughout the novel; Melony fights off apple pickers, Grace receives constant beatings from her husband, and Rose Rose suffers incest. Does the author seem to be making a connection between violence and sex? How do the women's individual responses to violence reflect their personalities?
9. The issues of fatherhood are complex--as seen in Larch's relation-ship with Homer, and Homer's relationship with Angel -- but being a good father or good parent is stressed throughout. According to the novel, what are some of the ingredients that make a good father? Is truthfulness one of them?
10. Candy's "wait and see" philosophy contrasts with Larch's constant tinkering with the future to suit his desires. Based on his personality, is Homer better suited to waiting or to working?
11. Herb Fowler's sabotaged condoms are one example of how people and rules in Ocean View are actually the opposite of what they seem. What other examples can you recall?
12. 12. Near the end, Homer's meeting with Melony is a turning point, spurring him to reveal the truth about Angel's parentage and to return to St. Cloud's, where he can be "of use." While reading, did you want to learn more about Melony's adventures during the intervening years or less? Which character do you think drove the novel's momentum?
13. If you saw the film adaptation of The Cider House Rules, discuss the aspects of the story that you think were stronger in the novel, and the portions of the film that were especially potent. What are your feelings about film adaptations of novels in general, and about the adaptation of this novel in particular? 14. What did you find to be particularly effective or well done in Irving's writing? If you've read other Irving novels, name some of the themes that he carries over from novel to novel.