Showing posts with label Book club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book club. Show all posts

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Man Book Club - read a book and talk about it together.

Man Book Club

Welcome to the home of the Man Book Club
http://www.swf.org.au/book-club/
Sydney Writers' Festival

We love books and we know that you do too but with so many fine tomes how do you choose what to read next?

Join the Man Book Club. Each month the SWF Artistic Director will select a new book to read, debate and discuss. At key points in the year, the monthly book will be selected from the Man Booker long list and short list and its other related prizes and lists. Each month we'll feature information, news, interviews, and articles on the selected book. And at every step, we want to hear from you. What do you think of this month's selected book? What do you think of the most recent Man Booker longlist? Did the right book win the Man Booker?


Each page has a comment box so you can share with others your highlights and criticisms of the book. Don't forget to rate them out of five!



June 2010 - Brooklyn by Colm Toibin
This month we decided to pick Colm Toibin, although never a winner of the Man Booker Prize, he was longlisted in 2009 with his current title Brooklyn, and has been shortlisted twice, in 1999 and 2004. A fantastic speaker, he was a highlight of this year's Festival.

BROOKLYNBrooklyn Synopsis
In a small town in the south-east of Ireland in the 1950s, Eilis Lacey is one among many of her generation who cannot find work at home. So when a job is offered in America, it is clear that she must go. Leaving her family and home, Eilis sets off to forge a new life for herself in Brooklyn. Young, homesick and alone, she gradually buries the pain of parting beneath the rhythms of a new life - days at the till in a large department store, night classes in Brooklyn College and Friday evenings on the dance floor of the parish hall - until she realizes that she has found a sort of happiness. But when tragic news summons her back to Ireland, and the constrictions of her old life unexpectedly give way to new possibilities, she finds herself facing a terrible choice: between love and happiness in the land where she belongs and the promises she must keep on the far side of the ocean.

Brooklyn is a tender story of great love and loss, and of the heartbreaking choice between personal freedom and duty. In the character of Eilis Lacey Colm Tóibín has created a remarkable heroine and in Brooklyn a novel of devastating emotional power.