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?
Thursday, February 24, 2011
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!
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.
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.
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.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
E.B. White

Our next book group meeting is Wednesday, December 8th @ 1pm. What are we reading? ...any of E.B. White's childrens' books.
What surprised our group was finding out that White only wrote three childrens books; Stuart Little (1945), Charlotte's Web (1952), and Trumpet of the Swan (1970).
And what is White's connection to Maine? He summered here as a child and moved his family from New York to Maine where he lived for twenty-eight years on a small farm in North Brooklin, Maine. Check out this Mapquest map to locate North Brooklin in Hancock County, Maine.
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