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Join the club?

The beginning of another year is often the prompt we need to try something new and I'm pleased to say that this month there's been a surge in interest in book clubs.

Our meeting in Woodbridge is only a week away but it's not too late to get a copy of the book and come along to join us. Scroll down for details but please let me know if you are hoping to attend so that I can be sure we have enough chairs!

Book groups are great for broadening our reading, sharing thoughts and opinions, puzzling over characters' behaviours, delighting in plot developments and wondering about authors' motivations and messages. And they're also a good place to meet like-minded people.

Many celebrities, businesses and magazines have developed their own book clubs to strengthen their brand identities and build a community.

Following on from the success of tv's Richard and Judy's Book Club, Oprah Winfrey in the US and 'Between the Covers' on BBC2, there are also book recommendations from singer Florence Welch and actors Reece Witherspoon, Emma Watson and Sarah Michelle-Geller. 

The book list from former president of the USA Barack Obama is always very popular and there's also a Reading Room hosted by the Queen Consort.

Author and editor Alexandra Pringle, from Bloomsbury, launched a Silk Road Slippers Book Club with author Nesrine Malik last year, and even clothing company Toast has a book club and author interviews. 

For our meeting in a few days' time, we'll be discussing Meg Mason's 'Sorrow and Bliss' which was also selected by Gwyneth Paltrow for her Goop club. I wonder how our opinions on the book will compare?!

And, although these online, virtual book clubs are a great resource for discovering new titles, you can't beat meeting together in person over a cup of coffee and a piece of flapjack, can you?! I hope to see you at the book group soon.

Thank you for reading.


NON-FICTION BOOK OF THE WEEK
Awe
by Dacher Keltner

Investigating the secret to happiness, the social psychologist Dacher Keltner has concluded that we need to experience 'awe' - our emotion when we encounter mysteries we don't understand.

The benefits are physical and mental as well as emotional, he argues in three ways in the book - scientific research, cultural history and personal stories and memories.

We can experience the 'good life' as we seek to be amazed and delighted each day, this book argues.

Though awe is by its nature surprising, unexpected, elusive, mysterious, it can be discovered anywhere and everywhere, by anyone. It doesn't require money, expertise, education or status. 

And the benefits can be vast, Keltner argues. Scientific studies of the brain suggest that when experiencing awe, excesses of the ego, including self-criticism, anxiety, depression even, decrease. 

"As our default self vanishes, awe shifts us from a competitive mindset to perceive that we are part of networks of more interdependent collaborating individuals...a chapter in the history of a family, a community, a culture...This transformation of the self brought about by awe is a powerful antidote to the isolation and loneliness that is epidemic today."

There's much to explore in this book though, for me, on occasion it felt a strange mix of 'science' and personal anecdote. Some of the arguments he makes are fascinating but could have been unpacked further. 

Overall this book is a great encouragement for us all to delight in what we see around us - the beauty and magnificence of the natural world, the transcendent power of music and a singer's voice, the wonder and admiration for compassionate behaviour and achievements in overcoming the odds. Well worth reading and considering!

For recommended non-fiction titles, take a look here.

CHILDREN'S BOOK OF THE WEEK
The Station Cat
by Stephen Hogtun

Haunting illustrations are a powerful accompaniment to this melancholy tale about people at a railway station - these individuals ultimately gain hope and relief from sadness through interactions with a station cat. 

The station is a dull, grey, gloomy place. The people waiting on the platform, heads bowed, mouths turned down, remain isolated and silent. 

Then a little kitten wanders among them. Her soft fur and bright green eyes bring light and life to the scene, distracting the travellers from their woes.

As the kitten meets each person at the station, she learns about their concerns, sorrows and difficulties. And she helps them see things a little differently, bringing hope and colour to their lives. 

This is a sophisticated presentation of an important message of the value of community and reaching out to others. It is simply and attractively told so will appeal to readers aged five and much older! The story stays with you long after you close the pages.

Read about more recommended children's books here.

Browsers Bookshop Book Group
at St John's Hall, Woodbridge

Monday 30 January 8pm 
talking about...

Sorrow and Bliss
by Meg Mason

The American novelist and bookshop owner, Ann Patchett recommends this book with great enthusiasm. It made her 'bark like a seal' and is 'brilliantly faceted', scaring her, moving her and educating her. What will we make of it?!
Buy your book from Browsers Bookshop in Woodbridge with a 10 per cent book group discount and read along. There will be details about how to attend the meeting nearer the time. 
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