Nominations for November book of the month

Members of the forum choose and read a new book every month together, and then discuss it. You can nominate a book to be book of the month using the book's page on Bookshelves. Simply click the link that says 'Nominate for book of the month' on the left side of the book's Bookshelves page near the social sharing buttons. Don't be scared to nominate, as you can change your nomination to a different book if you think of something better.
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Vixen
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Post by Vixen »

boy on a wire written by Jon Doust
this book is a story about a young boy called Jack Muir who is going through adolescence. the story is set In western Australia in the late 1950's to early 1960's.
This book isn't the same genre as my usual but i enjoyed it and I'm sure other people who read this type of genre will enjoy it even more.
dante92
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Post by dante92 »

I don't know if you have read it yet but my choice is The Alienist by Caleb Carr
Amrita
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Post by Amrita »

The Life of Pi by Yann Martel - have people on this thread already read this? I heard it was good.
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Bowlie
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Post by Bowlie »

Amrita wrote:The Life of Pi by Yann Martel - have people on this thread already read this? I heard it was good.
It's great! It's one of my favorite books of all time!
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Gannon
Previous Member of the Month
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Post by Gannon »

Bowlie wrote:
Amrita wrote:The Life of Pi by Yann Martel - have people on this thread already read this? I heard it was good.
It's great! It's one of my favorite books of all time!
Me too. It is one fantastic read. I loved the "man-eating island". Do not really get what this island is supposed to mean and it is a bizarre twist in the book.
Shari_K
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Post by Shari_K »

I'd like to nominate Handle With Care by Jodi Picoult...book looks good and it is one of my "to read" books :)
Event Horizon
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Post by Event Horizon »

I nominate The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri I recently bought it and am going to read it once I finish the book I've already started. Great nominations so far.
Booklover1981
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Joined: 19 May 2009, 15:43
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Post by Booklover1981 »

I nominate The Affinity Bridge - George Mann.
gloria1912
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Joined: 07 Oct 2009, 21:33
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Post by gloria1912 »

I nominate The time traveler's wife' by Audrey Niffenegger
davidwberner
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Post by davidwberner »

May I offer a book for your book club and discussion -
I am the author of -
Accidental Lessons - A Memoir of a Rookie Teacher and a Life Renewed, (Strategic Publishing, 2009)
This book received favorable publicity and reviews since its release this past spring, including the Chicago Tribune, Sun Times, WGN Radio (Chicago), KDKA Radio/TV (Pittsburgh), Bookreview and others.

My publisher (AEG Publishing/Strategic) and I are offering the author's participation in your online book club event. Please feel free to contact the author directly at the email listed below.

Best,
David W. Berner
davidwberner@gmail
davidwberner
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Post by davidwberner »

Please consider -

Accidental Lessons - A Memoir of a Rookie Teacher and a Life Renewed
By David W. Berner

Blurb from Bookreview -



By BookReview (Madison, WI United States) -

You'll be hard pressed to find anyone these days that can't identify with David W. Berner on some level. His memoir, "Accidental Lessons", begins with his first day at Cowherd Middle School (and yeah, I looked it up. It's there; Cow Herd.) But Berner isn't a student. He's a teacher, and he's just hit hard economic times (sound familiar?). After his reporting gig falls through and the Dot-com bubble bursts he suddenly finds himself at the mercy of a legion of rough inner city street kids. Berner doesn't sugarcoat the situation. It's bad. But what "Accidental Lessons" proves is that it's when situations are at their most dire that we find out exactly what we're made of, and that even kids who seem bad, when given the chance, are often good.

It's remarkable to hear about Berner's double-sided experience with both teaching and learning in the classroom. Like anyone on their first day at school, Berner does what he sees the other teachers doing, and as he gets settled into the life of a middle school teacher, he begins to learn things about himself that he never did while reporting on golf over the internet. The heart of "Accidental Lessons" is perfectly summated in its title. These are the lessons that come with loss; loss of a father, loss of a marriage, loss of a career. Berner discovers that the kids he's teaching know a thing or two about loss, maybe even a thing or two more than him. This is, as they say, the school of "Hard Knocks", and David W. Berner brings his reporter's pen to the school desk. He gives you a front row seat.

It wouldn't do justice to Berner's memoir to say that the stories he tells about his interactions with the students at Cowherd Middle School are a roller coaster ride. They are, but this is the kind of roller coaster that you never quite feel safe riding. Cowherd is a school that funnels in society's cruel outcasts. "Accidental Lessons" will toss you like a cork at sea, throw you heavy against its steel straps, and when it's done you'll never be quite the same. This is the kind of book you tell your friends about as if, just by reading it, you had lived it. It's the kind of ride that you feel in your legs long after you've gotten off, and are waiting in line to ride again.
cathygray
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Post by cathygray »

"The Practical Guide to Exceptional Living" by Jim Garland........
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cameron333
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Post by cameron333 »

I nominate The Satanic Verses by Salmon Rushdie. It sounds like a great book to me, and have heard multiple reviews saying it is good.

[Just to add, from what I have read, nothing in it is satanic per se. The author isnt even religious.]
Phobophobia
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Joined: 29 Jul 2009, 21:30
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Post by Phobophobia »

I'll have to go with 'The Time Traveler's Wife'.
bburke1400
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Joined: 13 Oct 2009, 23:14
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Post by bburke1400 »

hi, just joined the club. I nominate "I, Lucifer" by Glen Duncan. A friend just read it, said it was amazing; also, a movie is in the works for it starring daniel craig.
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