Hi everyone --
This is a reminder that we meet next week at Freed-Montrose Library at 6pm to discuss MIDDLESEX by Jeffery Eugenides. Marcella is leading the discussion.
We'll be meeting in the downstairs conference room. FYI - There might be some unexpected overlap with the group meeting before us who are part of a public Tax Preparation volunteer effort. They are supposed to be finished at 6 pm. That doesn't leave much "wiggle room".
Haven't heard from many of you who definitely plan to attend the May 3rd 2:30 pm performance at the Alley Theatre of the play titled ROCK 'N ROLL written by Tom Stoppard. My husband and I are still planning on attending and our group will still be discussing ROCK 'N ROLL on April 2nd no matter how many attend the live performance.
As an Alley subscriber, I get a $5.00 discount on other tickets I purchase. If you are interested, please be prepared with cash or a check for $45.00 per ticket at our meeting next week. Of course everyone still has the option of buying your own tickets (or attending a cheaper performance). Alley Box office phone is
713/220-5700 If you are interested in being included in our dinner reservation (hopefully at Bierra Poiretti's), let me know by our April 2nd book club meeting.
Looking forward to the discussion of MIDDLESEX. See you next Thursday!
--Alice
http://www.houstonbookclubs.org/Montrose
http://www.houstonbookclubs.org/blog/
http://groups.google.com/group/MontroseGreatBooks
http://www.houstongreatbooks.net/groups/Montrose.html
http://www.houstonbookclubs.org/GreatBooksGuide.htm
UPCOMING READING SELECTIONS
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-- Feb 5, 2009 MIDDLESEX by Jeffrey Eugenides (publ 2002) 544 pages
2003 Pulitzer Prize winner, also 2007 Oprah Book Club selection
The narrator and protagonist, an intersexed person has 5-alpha-reductase deficiency. The bulk of the novel is devoted to telling his coming-of-age story growing up in Detroit, Michigan in the late 20th century....story is intertwined with elements of a family saga, meditations on the era's zeitgeist and bits of contemporary history. Possible discussion questions at
http://www.bookbrowse.com/reading_guides/detail/index.cfm?book_number...
-- Marcella will lead discussion
-- Mar 5, 2009 WAITING FOR THE BARBARIANS by J.M. Coetzee (publ 1980) 156 pages
Author is the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2003.
Story is set in a small frontier town of a nameless empire. The Nobel Prize committee called this book "a political thriller in the tradition of Joseph Conrad, in which the idealist's naivete opens the gates to horror". "Early in the novel, it's apparent who the barbarians really are, that's no surprise. What is a surprise, however, is the compassion Coetzee shows his victims and villains alike." Possible discussion questions at
http://www.geocities.com/aauw_vancouver/groupdetail/barbarians.html
-- Alice will lead discussion.
-- Apr 2, 2009 ROCK 'N' ROLL by Tom Stoppard (premier 2006) 144 pages
List of awards for Sir Stoppard at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Stoppard#Honours_and_awards
ROCK 'N' ROLL is a play concerned with the significance of rock and roll in the emergence of the democratic movement in Eastern Bloc Czechoslovakia. Takes place over several decades.
FYI - A group theatre event by Montrose Great Books members is planned for the May 3rd afternoon local performance at the Alley Theatre. Feel free to purchase your tickets anytime if you have not signed up with Alice for a ticket but let Alice know if you want to be included in the dinner reservation planned for after the performance.
-- Leader of discussion is TBD
-- May 7, 2009 CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES by John Kennedy Toole (publ 1980) 352 pages
Pulitzer Prize winner in 1981
Setting is New Orleans in the early 1960s. The central character is an intelligent but slothful man still living with his mother at age 30 in the city's Uptown neighborhood, who, because of family circumstances, must set out to get a job. In his quest for employment he has various adventures with colorful French Quarter characters. Many locals and writers of New Orleans think that it is the best and most accurate depiction of the city in a work of fiction.
-- Claudia will lead discussion
-- June 4, 2009 TOO LOUD A SOLITUDE by Bohumil Hrabal (self published in 1977) 112 pages
Considered one of the greatest Czech writers of the 20th century, the man whom Kundera considers to be one of his masters.
Tells the story of an eclectic and dimwitted old man who works as a paper crusher at a hydraulic press in a dark cellar in Prague. Using his job to save and amass astounding numbers of rare and banned books, he is an obsessive collector of knowledge. The books that he must destroy become his whole life, his only companions.
--Jo will lead discussion
Note: At end of discussion in June, group will vote on new titles for upcoming reading list..
-- July 2, 2009 SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES by Ray Bradbury (publ 1972) 317 pages
About two thirteen-year-old boys who have a harrowing experience with a nightmarish traveling carnival that comes to their Midwestern town. The carnival's leader is the mysterious "Mr. Dark" who bears a tattoo for each person who, lured by the offer to live out his secret fantasies, has become bound in service to the carnival. Novel places emphasis on the more serious side of the transition from childhood to adulthood.
-- Cassie will lead discussion
-- August 6, 2009 MAIN STREET by Sinclair Lewis (publ 1920) 448 pages
First American to win Nobel Prize in 1930.
Captures the aura of small town America which requires conformity to tradition and social standards in exchange for recognition, respect and love from one's neighbors, versus the City as depicted by Washington which seems to offer freedom and individuality precisely because there's no one there who cares about you or what you do.
--Susan will lead discussion