Get Social – and Read!
Reading is no longer a solitary activity; if you love books and want to meet new people, join a book club and get social!
Aside from the pleasure of sharing thoughts on a book you’ve enjoyed, there’s the special pleasure of discovering new and different authors, rediscovering old favorites, or exploring a genre (mysteries anyone?)
Book Club Options
Online book groups: Online book groups jumped into the spotlight during the Covid lockdowns. Readers avidly took to Zoom and realized the convenience.
Online book groups are a godsend for anyone with mobility issues (No car? No problem!) and is a real convenience that saves energy and time as well.
Senior Planet’s Book Club is a favorite for many people, who vote on a book, read the assigned chapters, and gather online once a week to discuss. They just finished The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison and will vote on the next book. Learn more here.
Looking or a more freewheeling discussion? Senior Planet Community offers a Book Lovers Group as well.
Local Book Clubs
For an in-person experience, it’s easy to find nearby clubs:
- Local libraries. Most host at least one book club and many big city library systems host several throughout their respective cities and post the information online. It’s easy to find the upcoming books for discussion, the location and meeting dates. Rose Mary O’Malley belongs to three book clubs in her city. Besides the obvious reason (“I love to read!”) O’Malley enjoys the socializing and discovering new authors.
- Bookstores. National book chains like Barnes and Noble offer location finder to check out what their local B&N Club is reading now, plus author events and much more. Search here.
- Facebook and Meet-Up: Its easy to search for “Book Clubs Near Me” for listings.
How Book Clubs Work
Book Selections: Book selection approaches vary. Library and book stores usually make the selections. If the venue merely acts as a host, members make their own decisions.
Some clubs read the hosts’ or organizers’ choices. Others are more democratic: everyone votes on the books to be read. Senior Planet’s virtual book club members vote on the upcoming choice. Some groups allow each member to takes a turn picking the next book – a decision that spares a lot of debate about what to read.
While most book clubs read fiction, non-fiction or a mix, there are genres clubs for readers who particularly relish (for example):
- Biography and/or autobiography
- Historical novels
- True crime, mystery, thrillers
- Speculative fiction, including science fiction and fantasy
Lunch or dinner club groups. Many clubs “make a meal of it”. Sometimes it’s a bring-your-own sandwich or salad gathering. For others, it’s a social event over a late lunch or early dinner, in a restaurant or in a member’s home. For home meetings, hosting member (usually a great cook!) prepares the main dish; members contribute appetizers, drinks (including wine), and desserts.
Want to Launch a Book Club?
If you can’t find a nearby club, launch your own! Leslie Marks in Spring, Texas posted a Facebook invitation. Within days, 17 people responded; the first restaurant meeting was scheduled within weeks of Marks’ posting.
If you launch your own book club, try these tips:
- Keep meetings to the same day. Even if the month changes (monthly or every six or more weeks) don’t jumble the day. A member of a club that fell apart in six months believes that the constant day and date change (to satisfy everyone’s busy schedules) prompted the demise.
- Take turns. Most clubs enjoy free-wheeling, chime-in-as-you-please discussions. In others, each person takes an uninterrupted turn (about a minute or so) to say what he or she thought about the book followed by the discussion.
- Limit membership. Absent a strong discussion leader, six to eight members works well. In a too-large group, there’s a risk of two or three side discussions going on at the same time, defeating the larger purpose.
Your turn:
Tell us your favorite book club story! Let us know in the comments!
Nona Aguilar is an award-winning writer of numerous magazine articles and two books. She has also edited four specialty business newsletter publications. Her work has appeared in Ladies Home Journal, Redbook, Family Circle and Cosmopolitan, and in The Business Owner.
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Comments
I’m an only son to a 93 year old mom. She worked for many years, 50 years in the NYC school system as a teacher’s aide. After 20 plus years of retirement many of her co worker friends have either died or moved away. The social compartment of mom’s life is somewhat non existence. I am hoping this Senior Planet may be an option mother. I’m thinking one of the book clubs could offer mom something to do and to meet passionate, intelligent people.
Hi Alonzo! I was just googling/searching for a book club for my 97 year old mom. She’s never been much of a fiction reader so its a bit of an uphill battle right now. I’m encouraging my mom to read because its supposed to help with memory by remembering the characters, their lives and the story plot in a book. I don’t know where to go from here? Did you get your mom into a book club here on this platform? Does she like it?
why not call the Senior Planet helpline at 888-713-3495, M-F 9am-8pm EDT / Sat 9am-2pm EDT so you can help your mom join our Book Club and Senior Planet Community? AARP also has many resources for caregivers that may interest you.
I’ve run a book club via MeetUp for 14 years. We started meeting in person, switched to Zoom in 2020. We have active members who aren’t local now, so we’re sticking with online. We read contemporary literary fiction – novels and short stories – and discuss in depth. It’s a wonderful group, and we love learning from each other as well as from the authors we read.