About
Without books, history is silent, literature is dumb, science is crippled, thought and speculation at a standstill. –Barbara Tuchman
The R&W Book Club is a place for us to talk about books—with each other and, from time to time, with the authors of featured titles. We’ll read fiction, non-fiction and poetry. We encourage your suggestions for authors and books to include. There are a few limitations on what we’ll consider: books must be by living authors, have broad audience appeal, and be readily available at libraries, bookstores or via download. If you’d like to suggest authors or titles, go here. If you’d like your local book club or library included in our email early-notification group, go here.
recent book club posts
- What will teens in your family be reading this summer?
- What should I read after Game of Thrones?–a conversation on fantasy
- Far Alaska, a new novel by Mason Smith
- Why do so many Great Books have lousy leading ladies?
- Terry Tempest Williams interview audio
- Poet George Bilgere, author of “The White Museum”
- Siobhan Fallon: When the title tells the story
- Remembering — and hopefully reading — Iain Banks
- What happened when I ran into Anna Karenina on vacation
- Moist? Ugh. Mucus? Yuck. Words we hate.
links
Books at NCPR
- Book review: "Peak Experiences"(May 14, 2013) The mountains of the northeast attract hikers to their rocky summits. What happens, though, when something goes wrong? Carol Stone White collected over 50 essays in her new book, Peak Experiences - Danger, Death, and Daring in the Mountains of the Northeast. Betsy Kepes as this review. [full story] […]
- Books: "Friends in a Storm"(May 9, 2013) A new children's book by Canton writer Mary Sue Seymour includes illustrations by a young artist from Ogdensburg. Friends in a Storm tells the story of Squirrel, who gets locked out of his house during a rainstorm, and is befriended by Owl. Todd Moe spoke with author Mary Sue Seymour and 12-year-old artist Samantha Flynn, who created the i […]
- Readers & Writers: Terry Tempest Williams, "When Women Were Birds"(Apr 30, 2013) Our guest is well-known essayist and poet Terry Tempest Williams, talking about her most recent book, When Women Were Birds, Fifty-Four Variations on Voice - a collection of short essays on memory, faith and voice. Williams' work is steeped in the landscape and lore of Utah and the West where she has lived and worked most of her life. Ell […]
Books at NPR
- Decade Later And Across An Ocean, A Novel Gets Its Due May 19, 2013John Williams' Stoner sold just 2,000 copies when it was originally published in 1965. It's now acknowledged as a classic work, is a best-seller across Europe and the No. 1 novel in the Netherlands. […]
- Unacceptable Anger From 'The Woman Upstairs' May 19, 2013"Women's anger is very scary to people," author Claire Messud says. Her new novel, The Woman Upstairs, features a seething main character, a young woman whose anger is unsettling. […]
- Three-Minute Fiction: 'Ten Ring Fingers' And 'Ghost Words' May 19, 2013NPR's Bob Mondello and Susan Stamberg read excerpts of two of the best submissions for Round 11 of our short story contest. They read Ten Ring Fingers by Tamara Breuer of Washington, D.C., and Ghost Words by Matheus Macedo of Winthrop, Mass. […]
- Siblings' Separation Haunts In 'Kite Runner' Author's Latest May 19, 2013Khaled Hosseini's new novel, like his two earlier works, is set partly in Afghanistan — but this time, political turmoil isn't a major element of the plot. Instead, And The Mountains Echoed is a story of a family's loss that spans decades and continents. […]
Book Club Team
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