Library club combines books and beverages | Online Features | thefoothillsfocus.com – Foothills Focus

Posted: August 7, 2022 at 1:52 am


without comments

These days, book clubs are increasingly taking place outside of traditional coffee shops and libraries, in spots such as restaurants, bars and homes. As part of its programming, the Desert Foothills Library in Cave Creek offers a happy hour book club.

The gatherings take place the second Tuesday of every month in different restaurants around Cave Creek and Carefree. They are facilitated by three members of the library staff: acquisitions librarian Sara Zapotocky, circulation manager Kassie Green, and youth and teen services manager Heather Wurr.

Zapotocky said, from the start, the book club offered a more social setting for talking about books and has gotten locals to discover new places in their community.

Thats the whole idea, is we want to encourage bringing business to local restaurants in the Cave Creek/Carefree area. That was one of our goals not just to meet but to help our community, Zapotocky said.

The book club started in the summer of 2019 but had to be moved online for a time due to the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. It has been back in person full-time since March 2022. Zapotocky said even when the meetings went online, she encouraged participants to have a drink and a snack while discussing books.

During meetings at restaurants, the library provides appetizers for book club members, but they need to purchase their own beverages and entrees. The August edition of the book club will be held at the library. During this meeting, refreshments, including alcoholic beverages, will be served.

As for the book club, participants read a variety of different types of works, including nonfiction, classics, memoirs and contemporary fiction.

I feel like its a really good mix of books. Its eclectic, and I think thats part of what our regulars like is that its not tied to one genre, Green said.

All of the facilitators are avid readers who developed a love of books early in life. Green grew up with a mom who was an English teacher. The book club gives the facilitators an excuse to find and read something new.

We are mostly choosing books that we want to read ourselves. This is a great excuse, Zapotocky said.

The facilitators all have a chance to select books.

We are taking turns picking the books and then the month that its my book, the expectation is that I would facilitate it. And staff are always there to be supportive, even if its not their month, Green said.

Green is a fan of true crime and mystery books, while Zapotocky leans more towards nonfiction. Green said the facilitators look for books that will spark conversations, even when book club members may not like them.

We just have gotten a lot of great contrasting viewpoints, as you might imagine, in the discussions, Green added.

The books discussed change every month. The library has digital and paper copies of the titles, or participants can choose to purchase their own copies.

The August book will be Megan Rosenblooms Dark Archives: A Librarians Investigation into the Science and History of Books Bound in Human Skin.

In September, the book club will read Miranda Cowley Hellers The Paper Palace. This fictional work follows Elle, a mother of three, as she wakes up at the summer home she has visited for much of her life. This time is different, as she had an adult encounter with her longtime friend Jonas and must make a decision about the direction of her life moving forward.

October will be focused on the psychological/social commentary horror novel The Only Good Indians, by Stephen Graham Jones.

Other books this year have included Stephen Daviss Gold Dust Woman: A Biography of Stevie Nicks; Danny Trejos and Donal Logues Trejo: My Life of Crime, Redemption, and Hollywood; a novel about the struggles faced by a Vietnamese family during the Vietnam War called The Mountains Sing, by Nguyn Phan Qu Mai; a nonfiction story about the first women to attend Yale called Yale Needs Women: How the First Group of Girls Rewrote the Rules of an Ivy League Giant, by Anne Gardiner Perkins; and a biography about the women in Benjamin Franklins life called Poor Richards Women, by Nancy Rubin Stuart.

During one month, book club members were encouraged to choose from different young adult books in the same reimagined fairy tale series.

Zapotocky says through the book club, participants often discover new literature.

It gets them to read a book that they probably never would have read, Zapotocky said.

Generally, around eight core members show up to the meetings, but newbies are encouraged to come check it out. The number of attendees fluctuates, depending on the time of the year. But many regulars get to know each other over multiple book club meetings. There is always a portion of the meetings designated for catching up with each other.

It always starts with, What has been going on in our life as we are ordering a drink or an appetizer. And then, we will get to the book, Zapotocky said.

Upcoming book club meetings will take place from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays on Aug. 9, Sept. 13 and Oct. 11. An online RSVP is encouraged.

More information on the book club and other adult programming offerings at the library by going to dfla.org/events/category/adult-programming or by calling 480-488-2286.

Visit link:
Library club combines books and beverages | Online Features | thefoothillsfocus.com - Foothills Focus

Related Posts

Written by admin |

August 7th, 2022 at 1:52 am

Posted in Online Library




matomo tracker