Monday, December 28, 2009


I fell off the wagon. Sorry guys, the Hullabaloo wasn't as fulfilling as I suspected. If Brett made it through, I believe he was the lone survivor of the Guava Orchard. Let us pretend that it never happened.
Onward to something new that WILL revive this god damned book club! For Festivus Andrew presented me with Bluebeard by Kurt Vonnegut. Read it! Someone announce a new book in about a month, and then we will be discussing this one fo' real.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Bluebeard

January 1st

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

and we're back!

After lengthy thought and debate, a decision has been made,
Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard
the first novel of Kiran Desai. This is the book, the book that will revive us! Honestly there were a number of books that I contemplated throwing up all over this blog, although none of them are here are they? I finally found this book it practically landed in my lap. It's about a young man trying to escape the realities of adulthood, just like Robbie. Also it's a short read, 200 pages long, so I'm hoping all of you in "Med" school and such will have time to read it. Oh did I mention it's classified YA, not NA for those of you that don't know what that stands for its young adult, and non-alcoholic respectively. We are expanding what some "Graduate" students might call the diversity of this book club, and we are doing it monthly. Be finished with this book by Thanksgiving. For those of you that are going to be in Oakland for the holiday we can have a REAL book club meeting!

Happy reading to all.
BMB


Monday, October 26, 2009

The Sun

Yeah, the Sun. It's getting pretty low in the sky these days. Which means less daylight, and so much more time to read. How about we revive this group and choose a book. Now, I know that I haven't read the last couple books, but I was young and inexperienced then. I've grown up. I'm ready to read the same book that all of you are reading, and I'm ready to discuss it over the interwebs. What do y'all say?!

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

A Reminder as You Dig into Cadillac Desert...

I can't speak for everyone else, but there were times traveling around the Western U.S. when I felt a bit guilty. L.A., Phoenix, Gomora. Some of that stuff probably should not be there, but it is.

However, many of you lived in Flagstaff at one point or another. I'm going to suggest that no one feel guilty about living in Flagstaff. From what I've read so far (halfway through the book) Reisner doesn't try to reconcile smaller settlements and prudent use of water with the arid west.

Flagstaff is nestled between a high-altitude canyon rim (adiabatic cooling catalyst) and some super bad-ass mountains. Through snow melt, monsoon recharge and local aquifers our little mountain town served as a sort of point source for water resources. Furthermore, there was no large-scale agriculture or irrigation associated with the city.

Don't cry Flagstaffians, it's not your fault. Now let's go shoot poo-water all over AZ Snowbowl!

Required Reading

PLEASE, READ MORE BOOKS!

Palin's Resignation Speech:


Alaska Governor Sarah Palin stepped down from her position on Sunday at 3p.m. local time and delivered a farewell speech, the following is her speech full transcript:

"What an absolutely beautiful day it is, and it is my honor to speak to all Alaskans, to our Alaskan family this last time as your governor. And it is always great to be in Fairbanks. The rugged rugged hardy people that live up here and some of the most patriotic people whom you will ever know live here, and one thing that you are known for is your steadfast support of our military community up here and I thank you for that and thank you United States military for protecting the greatest nation on Earth. Together we stand.

And getting up here I say it is the best road trip in America soaring through nature's finest show. Denali, the great one, soaring under the midnight sun. And then the extremes. In the winter time it's the frozen road that is competing with the view of ice fogged frigid beauty, the cold though, doesn't it split the Cheechakos from the Sourdoughs?

And then in the summertime such extreme summertime about a hundred and fifty degrees hotter than just some months ago, than just some months from now, with fireweed blooming along the frost heaves and merciless rivers that are rushing and carving and reminding us that here, Mother Nature wins. It is as throughout all Alaska that big wild good life teeming along the road that is north to the future.

That is what we get to see every day. Now what the rest of America gets to see along with us is in this last frontier there is hope and opportunity and there is country pride.

And it is our men and women in uniform securing it, and we are facing tough challenges in America with some seeming to just be Hell bent maybe on tearing down our nation, perpetuating some pessimism, and suggesting American apologetics, suggesting perhaps that our best days were yesterdays.

But as other people have asked, "How can that pessimism be, when proof of our greatness, our pride today is that we produce the great proud volunteers who sacrifice everything for country?" Now this week alone, Sean Parnell and I we're on the, um, on Ft. Rich the base there, the army chapel, and we heard the last roll call, and the sounding of Taps for three very brave, very young Alaskan soldiers who just gave their all for all of us. Together we do stand with gratitude for our troops who protect all of our cherished freedoms, including our freedom of speech which, par for the course, I'm going to exercise.

And first, some straight talk for some, just some in the media because another right protected for all of us is freedom of the press, and you all have such important jobs reporting facts and informing the electorate, and exerting power to influence. You represent what could and should be a respected honest profession that could and should be the cornerstone of our democracy.

Democracy depends on you, and that is why, that's why our troops are willing to die for you. So, how 'bout in honor of the American soldier, ya quite makin' things up. And don't underestimate the wisdom of the people, and one other thing for the media, our new governor has a very nice family too, so leave his kids alone.

OK, today is a beautiful day and today as we swear in Sean Parnell, no one will be happier than I to witness by God's grace Alaskans with strength of character advancing our beloved state. Sean has that. Craig Campbell has that. I remember on that December day, we took the oath to uphold our state constitution, and it was written right here in Fairbanks by very wise pioneers.

We shared the vision for government that they ground in that document. Our founders wrote "all political power is inherent in the people. All government originates with the people. It's founded upon their will only and it's instituted for the good of the people as a whole." Their remarkably succinct words guided us in all of our efforts in serving you and putting you first, and we have done our best to fulfill promises that I made on Alaska Day, 2005, when I first asked for the honor of serving you.

Remember then, our state so desired and so deserved ethics reform. We promised it, and now it is the law. Ironically, it needs additional reform to stop blatant abuse from partisan operatives, and I hope the lawmakers will continue that reform. We promised that you would finally see a fair return on your Alaskan owned natural resources so we build a new oil and gas appraisal system, an is an equitable formula to usher in a new era of competition and transparency and protection for Alaskans and the producers.

ACES incentivizes new exploration and it's the exploration that is our future. It opens up oil basins and it ensures that the people will never be taken advantage of again. Don't forget Alaskans you are the resource owners per our constitution and that's why for instance last year when oil prices soared and state coffers swelled, but you were smacked with high energy prices, we sent you the energy rebate. See, it's your money and I've always believed that you know how to better spend it than government can spend it.

I promised that we would protect this beautiful environment while safely and ethically developing resources, and we did. We built the Petroleum Oversight Office and a sub-cabinet to study climate conditions. And I promised I'd govern with fiscal restraint, so to not immorally burden futre generations. And we did...we slowed the rate of government growth and I vetoed hundreds of millions of dollars of excess and wtih lawmakers we saved billions for the future.

I promsed that we'd lead the charge to forward funding education, and hold schools accountable, and improve opportunities for special needs students and elevate vo-tech training and we paid down pension debt.

I promised that we would manage our fish and wildlife for abundance, and that we would defend the constitution, and we have, though outside special interest groups they still just don't get it on this one. Let me tell you, Alaskans really need to stick together on this with new leadership in this area especially, encouraging new leadership... got to stiffen your spine to do what's right for Alaska when the pressure mounts, because you're going to see anti-hunting, anti-second amendment circuses from Hollywood and here's how they do it.

They use these delicate, tiny, very talented celebrity starlets, they use Alaska as a fundraising tool for their anti-second amendment causes. Stand strong, and remind them patriots will protect our guaranteed, individual right to bear arms, and by the way, Hollywood needs to know, we eat, therefore we hunt.

I promised energy solutions and we have, we have a plan calling for 50% of our electricity generated by renewable resources and we can now insist that those who hold the leases to develop our resources that they do so now on Alaska's terms. So now finally after decades of just talk, finally we're seeing oil and gas drilling up there at Point Thompson.

And I promised that we would get a natural gas pipeline underway and we did. Since I was a little kid growing up here, I remember the discussions, especially the political discussions just talking about and hoping for and dreaming of commercializing our clean, abundant, needed natural gas.

Our gas line inducement act, AGIA, that was the game-changer and this is thanks to our outstanding gas line team, and the legislature adopting this law, 58-1. They knew, they know AGIA is the vehicle to drive this monumental energy project and bring everyone to the table, this bipartisan victory, it came from Alaskans working together with free market private sector principles, and now we are on the road to the largest private-sector energy project in the history of America. It is for Alaska's future, it is for America's energy independence and it will make us a more peaceful, prosperous and secure nation.

What I promised, we accomplished. "We" meaning state staff, amazing commissioners, great staff assisting them, and conscientious Alaskans outside the bureaucracy - Tom Van Flein, and Meg Stapleton and Kristan Cole, so many others, many volunteers who just stepped up to the challenge as good Alaskans, but nothing, nothing could have succeeded without my right-hand man Kris Perry. She is the sharpest, boldest, hardest-working partner. Kris is my right-hand man and much success is due to Kris.

So much success, and Alaska there is much good in store further down the road, but to reach it we must value and live the optimistic pioneering spirit that made this state proud and free, and we can resist enslavement to big central government that crushes hope and opportunity. Be wary of accepting government largess. It doesn't come free and often, accepting it takes away everything that is free, melting into Washington's powerful "care-taking" arms will just suck incentive to work hard and chart our own course right out of us, and that not only contributes to an unstable economy and dizzying national debt, but it does make us less free.

I resisted the stimulus package. I resisted the stimulus package and we have championed earmark reform, slashing earmark requests by 85% to break the cycle of dependency on a stifling, unsustainable federal agenda, and other states should follow this for their and for America's stability. We don't have to feel that we must beg an allowance from Washington, except to beg the allowance to be self-determined. See, to be self-sufficient, Alaska must be allowed to develop - to drill and build and climb, to fulfill statehood's promise. At statehood we knew this.

At statehood we knew this, that we are responsible for ourselves and our families and our future, and fifty years later, please let's not start believing that government is the answer. It can't make you happy or healthy or wealthy or wise. What can? It is the wisdom of the people and our families and our small businesses, and industrious individuals, and it is God's grace, helping those who help themselves, and then this allows that very generous voluntary hand up that we're known for, enthusiastically providing those who need it.

Alaskans will remember that years ago, remember we sported the old bumper sticker that said, "Alaska. We Don't Give a Darn How They Do It Outside?" Do you remember that? I remember that, and remember it was because we would be different. We'd roll up our sleeves, and we would diligently sow and reap, and we can still do this to carve wealth out of the wilderness and make our living on the water, with strong hands and innovative minds, now with smarter technology.

It is what our first people and our parents did. It worked, because they worked. We must be prudent and persistent and press for the people's right to responsibly develop God-given resources for the maximum benefit of the people.

And we have come so far in just 50 years. We're no longer a frontier outpost on the periphery of the world's greatest nation. Now, as a contributor and a securer of America, we can attain our destiny in the promise of our motto "North to the Future." See, the pressing issue of our time, it's energy independence, because there is an inherent link between energy and security, and energy and prosperity. Alaska will lead with energy, we will prove you can be both pro-development and pro-environment, because no one loves their clean air and their land and their wildlife and their water more than an Alaskan. We will protect it.

Yes, America must look north to the future for security, for energy independence, for our strategic location on the globe. Alaska is the gate-keeper of the continent.

So, we are here today at a changing of the guard. Now, people who know me, and they know how much I love this state, some still are choosing not to hear why I made the decision to chart a new course to advance the state. And it should be so obvious to you. (indicating heckler) It is because I love Alaska this much, sir (at heckler) that I feel it is my duty to avoid the unproductive, typical, politics as usual, lame duck session in one's last year in office. How does that benefit you? No, with this decision now, I will be able to fight even harder for you, for what is right, for truth. And I have never felt like you need a title to do that.

So, as we all move forward together, let's vow to keep championing Alaska, to advocate responsible development, and smaller government, and freedom, and when I took the oath to serve you, I promised...remember I promised to steadfastly and doggedly guard the interests of this great state like that grizzly guards her cubs, as a mother naturally guards her own.

And I will keep that vow wherever the road may lead. Todd and I, and Track, Bristol, Tripp, Willow, Piper, Trig...I think I got 'em all. We will forever be so grateful for the honor of our lifetime to have served you. Our whole big diverse full and fun family, we all thank you and I am very very blessed to have had their support all along, for Todd's support. I am thankful too. I have been blessed to have been raised in this last frontier. Thank you for our home, Mom and Dad, because in Alaska it is not an easy living, but it is a good living, and here it is impossible to lose your way. Wherever the road may lead you, we have that steadying great north star to guide us home.

So let's all enjoy the ride, and I thank you Alaska, and God bless Alaska and God bless America."

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

...a White Man set them Free


I think we have all done a good thing by putting in our two cents on this one, and pulling out a winner. The book for this month JULY, starting the 20th will be CADILLAC DESERT.

We have all live in the West at some time or another, and have experienced the dams, diverted rivers and reservoirs on numerous occasions. If you have ever even been to California, then you have definitely been impacted by some type of water rights issue. I got interested through my research, we spoke to some researchers from California who were dealing with cyanobacteria in the San Francisco delta. They described the fucked up water issues of Northern California and eluded to the even more fucked up way SOCAL gets its H2O. Fucking SO-CAL. I think this book will be interesting, and insightful and push Robbie to do something useful with his, up until now, wasted life.

So, just as the white conquerors of this great land ravaged the desert and created whatever the fuck they wanted out of it, we will take to the pages of history and, um ... ravage the fuck out of it? Yes!

I want everyone to read this book, and finish or start Robbie's, Another Roadside Attraction concurrently.

With love,

Andrew

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

The Next Book: Another Roadside Attraction, by Tom Robbins


Our next book: Another Roadside Attraction, by Tom Robbins (1971)

Friends and fans of the written word, I have no shame in admitting that I was the first to reply to the e-mail sent by our mutual acquaintence, Mr. Schwartz. I watched as my 'Inbox' text grew bold, and the number 1 appeared in parentheses. "I must reply NOW!" I thought to myself. Hesitation is a distant stranger to my demeanor; I did not read the e-mail and it's invitation to contest. I simply replied to it with the same message that I reply to all my e-mails with: "I win!". Unbeknownst to me at the time, I had won. Who'd of thought? Usually I get a reply from the Nigerian National Bank asking for my checking account and routing number. This time I got a reply asking for a book suggestion. Oh shit!

So, without further ado, I give you our next book: Another Roadside Attraction, by Tom Robbins. I should confess that I'm not nearly as responsible as some of you who have already suggested books. I haven't even read this book, nor have I done much background research on it. Furthermore, I only read the first 50 pages of the last Tom Robbins book that I attempted to read. So why choose "un-tested", and potentially inappropriate material? I offer two reasons in my defense:

First is comedy on a number of levels. On the surface, I simply wanted a fun, light-hearted text. I thought we could relax a little bit after the strange journies of Kafka, the constant threat of zombies and the death of Ultima. I was searching through the works of Mark Twain to satisfy this need, and was trying to choose between two pieces: Roughing It and Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Either of those would have made for an incredible literary experience, but they would require a lot of reading. I'm not referring solely to page number here, or to verbose, run-on sentences like the ones that I'm writing right now. Twain was brilliantly funny, but his humor was often subtle, indirect, and required re-reading paragraphs. It's what I like to refer to as the "Wait, what the fuck?" reaction. So, in lieu of Twain, I have chosen Robbins. I was glancing at the cover to Another Roadside and noticed a comment comparing Tom to Mark Twain. How perfect!  A shorter, and perhaps zanier experience awaits us. Some might call it trippy. 

The second part of my rationale is a love for non-linear plot lines. Some of the books that have been chosen thus far have shown hints of this style of plot. Moving from one scenario to the next, but not in any particular order, and often dissolving into a dream, or out of context altogether. I've taken this as a sign that our little club might want some more. Therefore, in serious danger of over-doing the "crazy plot" scheme, we will read Another Roadside Attraction. 

I wish I could end this note with another, smaller note like "This book changed my life, and I'm certain it will change yours". Unfortunately I can't. This book might even ruin your life. Remember two paragraphs ago, when I gave my first reason for choosing the book as "comedy on a number of levels"? If you read carefully, you noticed that I only cited the "surface" level. The underlying level of "funny" is that we're all in the same boat, and we don't know what to expect. Seriously though, I am so excited to re-read this book; I absolutely love it and I know you will too!

- Robbie

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Blood Meridian: Not a typical novel, but very worthwhile

Hello friendly bloggers/followers!
     I have noticed some contention surrounding the not-so-affable writing style of Cormac McCarthy and the chosen novel, Blood Meridian.  I must say, after finishing Bless Me, Última, I immediately began the new novel because, well, I ain't got too much time to read during finals.  Now, it could be my cowboy heritage, or my love of historical-fictional, but this motha fuckin book kicks ass.  It is most definitely violent.  Get over it, life is violent.  But the descriptions and the characters and plot are !!  Great.  

     I would also like to share what I believe many of us have picked up on with our readings: the connections between novels!
1. Kafka on the Shore: Takes place in Japan, main character is from Tokyo.
2. World War Z: This may seem a superficial connection, but my two favorite characters (aside from the dog trainers) Tomonaga Ijiro & Kondo Tatsumi were Japanese badasses!  With their katanas and whatnot, shee-it. 
     Also, Z had many locations, one such as the frontiers of New Mexico, crossed by the living and the living dead...
3. Bless Me, Última takes place with dear Antonio cerca del Llano (which is the border of Texas and New Mexico along the Llano River) and throughout New Mexico.
4. Blood Meridian begins in Tennessee but ends up taking place for the majority along the US/Mexico border, right near where our little Tony lived!  His dad is probably a descendant of some of these psychos.  Also, one of the prisoners in Chihuahua City tells, "I know of one old boy up on the Llano near the Dutch settlements, the caught him, took his horse..." (p.77)

Again, it may be a bit superficial, but I can't help but enjoy the connections.  Thanks to all who have chosen, and I look forward to our discussion this weekend and for our new book!
-----Much Love from Oakland, CA 
-----Obi-Wan Kenobi aka the Dan from Durango

Authors

I have decided that if you have selected a book, you can now post on the blog. SHAZAM

and he said, "Let it be so"

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Blood Meridian

I chose this book, because it is about the Southwest, which is better than the other -Wests and the Easts, and the other Souths, even the dirty South. Yes, its even better than the dirty south.

I wanted to read something by Cormac Mccarthy, this guy got a fucking genius grant to write this. Its probably violent, I know. But hopefully not too bad. Also, it has an amazing title. I love you.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

MAYbe

That is kind of a pun, you know MAY is coming up, and I put MAYbe. you get it.

Lets see, business as usual, after a delightful April and terrifying March, we are finally moving into our FOURTH book. Wow, thats maturity, thats beauty. We need to schedule discussions, if we have one about this book how does APril 25th sound? Send me some emails for a time. Or I will harass you about it. So we will talk about stuff and enjoy our time doing so, I look forward to these type of things.

The Onion A.V. Club decided to fuck us, and start a Book Club of their own, fucking copiers. Anyway, they are reading a book called Geek Love, sounds pretty good. But we ain's readin it. NO no no, unless you want to on your own time. We are reading whatever the fuck I want you to read, because I won the gosh darn voting, that 4 1/2 people participated in! What is this, NAU student senate elections! I should say that people do read the books, and we talk, a few of us do, but man you are one apathetic bunch. I don't mean to get all billy bob thorton on you but lets see a little action, a little involvement. Comment on these stupid blogs, write a blog post, send me naked pictures, I don't care. I'll photoshop them.

So, my book choice this month for the Month starting April 20th (4/20, I know robbie won't be starting any books on that day) and ending MAY 20th will be:

Blood Meridian
or an Evening Redness in the West

by Cormac McCarthy

I will write up a blurb, quickly


with it,

Andrew

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Hoping you're still alive

I know those of us now informed are keeping one eye open, and practicing our melee ability. But for those who decided to skip this last month's read please I implore you to check this book out. If not for your enjoyment, than for your health.

1. Look out for signs of weird diseases and government coverups
2. Practice your physcial skills
3. Know your surroundings and have an escape route.
4. Remember, Axes don't need to reload

Moving along, I was hoping we could coordinate a meetup this weekend, please call me and lets talk about this book. I am also going to announce the Next Book!! This one was picked out by one of my favorite best friends Alison K. Philips.
The Book is called, "BLESS ME, ULTIMA" by Rudolfo Anaya


Please enjoy. This book is a bit shorter than some of the others we have read, Sooooo I am thinking, please be done by April 10th instead of the 20th. Then we can start another one earlier. We should all have pleeenty of time during this joyous spring break.

Expect an update, soon!!

With it,

Andrew

Monday, February 16, 2009

Only the strong survive

Readers,

Hope everyone is almost done. And we can get on with discussing this wild-ride that was, "Kafka on the Shore"
When we are done, I hope some can attend the discussion. But I think we should change one of the days. Feel free to make suggestions, but I think we will still have the discussion on SUNDAY the 22nd, but now, instead of Saturday it will be on Thursday instead. PLEASE email me and we can come to a consensus on the days. How is 6 to 8 pm on Thursday and 4 to 6pm on Saturday. These are both Pacific time. So call someone and tell them to get on the Skype or the Gmail or the phone or whatever and Talk about this god forsaken book. Speaking of God Forsaken. The next book seems to be just that.





HERE IS CORINNE'S little BLURB on WORLD WAR Z

World War Z - An Oral History of the Zombie War, Max Brooks


So I have never read this book before, nor much science fiction for that matter. I'm loving Kafka on the Shore so much that I realize its a hard act to follow. Upon discussing my book chooser of the month role with a friend, she recommended this as a great book for a book club and listing off all of our mutual friends that are also now obsessed. None of these folks are your typical science fiction aficionados, so I take her word that its worth the read.

From my understanding the story is told through interviews looking back at the post apocalyptic world where Patient Zero came in and nearly wiped out humanity. Zombies took over and the war for survival raged. Max Brooks writes in his introduction, "By excluding the human factor, aren't we risking the kind of personal detachment from history that may, heaven forbid, lead us one day to repeat it? And in the end, isn't the human factor the only true difference between us and the enemy we now refer to as 'the living dead'?" I think the general them speaks to fear of the "other," the enemy, among other relevant metaphors of the time.

This is a link to the publisher's description, which I like the best of those that I've read so far.

http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780307346605



I think we all have something to look forward to...

I know you can get this on Amazon for eight books and some library is likely to have it. So get on it! Also, this is a great month to get more people on who didn't read last month. Talk to you soon....

Andrew

Monday, February 9, 2009

Feb-March Update

Book Readers,

I just wanted to put this out there. The new book for the Month February 20th to March 20th will be...


World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War.


Corinne will write more about it soon. When it is more official. I think there is a companion book you could read / look through first called: The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead.

These books may be sort of obscure from libraries, so reserve your copy today!

EXCITING!!!

-Andrew

Friday, February 6, 2009

February

Interesting... hmm, wow, what a great line. Yes.
Oh sorry, I was just reading the book, finishing it up, almost there and I guess I was interrupted. Still, I hope everyone is enjoying, I know I am and I can't give it up enough to ol Brett Allin. What a great guy huh?

Don't get worried now, everyone still has a few weeks to get on it. But I just want to put it out there that we should schedule a discussion. I am thinking the Saturday and/or Sunday after the 20th of February. Around 4pm pacific time on Saturday, and 11 am pacific on Sunday. Shouldn't be too early for anyone.

Here is how it will go down. If you want to call someone, email me and I will give you someones number that you need or someone random, if you wish. If you want to talk, chat, email Brett (the man who picked the book), here is his email: brett.allin@gmail.com He is from Danville, CA the same town as "SULLY" the Miracle Pilot. My email again is motandrew@gmail.com

Other than a ONE-on-ONE discussion with someone, we will try to do a group discussion. During those times I mentioned I will be on gmail and SKYPE. my skype name is "asuneater" so you can SKYPE me and then I will add you to the group call we will be having, if you are technology capable. Also, I think we can have a giant gmail group chat. Should work out well, just email me if we don't chat already. This is one of the most important parts of the book club, so lets try and make it work.

Either Way, I hope we talk. Yes, you and me... and I hope the next book goes down like sweet apple pie on a southern plantation. It will be picked out by none other than Corinne Ray, no not the famed singer/songwriter, instead a humble couchsurfer who now lives in the Bay Area. Email her corinne.ray@gmail.com or check out her inspiring website corinneray.com or watch her show "Weird, True, and Freaky" on Animal Planet. There will be more about her, and the new book soon! I am also going to email this out to everyone on the list until you start checking this blog regularly.

weird, true, Freaky?,

Andrew

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Book-readers

Hey New Book-Readers.

I hope everyone is engrossed in the current book, and the inauguration. I want to propose some change, and some democracy. I have talked to a few people who have started reading, and they think that a group discussion would be a fun idea at the end of this.

I propose we use Skype to do this. I'm not sure yet but this may allow us to video chat with each other, as well as chat in the more traditional sense.

I see there are nine followers of the blog, I think being a "follower" of the blog will give us all a sense of how big the club is, who is in it, and who we can communicate about the book with. So, please if you are joining or reading press the follow button and sign up! Thanks.

Finally, I am not sure how we will choose the next book yet, but that information will be released soon and then we will announce the new book with ample time to order it from the library, purchase or borrow it.

I hope everyone feels a sense of personal responsibility and inspiration from the events of today, January 20th and that it is meaningful and not naive to be hopeful. Just thought I would throw that out there.


Also, in a step to organize these events could everyone in the club email me: motandrew@gmail.com
with the subject line: Book Reading Club


Good Reading...

Andrew

Monday, January 12, 2009

Book Uno chosen by El Bretto


The book Brett chose January's book reading club book will be Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami. A favorite author of mine as well. Brett gave us this book with a short preface which has been included below.



To the Inaugural Members of a Grand Book Club,

With mucha gracia to our great friend and mutual acquaintance Andrew Schwartz, I have chosen our first piece of literature. It is a book that I read once in a strange land and one that I look forward to reading again in an even stranger land (Danville). It is written by the Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami, and is titled Kafka on the Shore. It is the bizarre story of a free-spirited young man, a remarkable simpleton, and a plethora of other strange characters and happenings. It works with notions of cause, fate, and the nature of Time itself. Besides this, I will just say that it is beautifully written, and I will leave the rest for you to read and interpret, and for us to discuss when the time is ripe.

I hope you can find a well-worn copy in your local library or used bookstore, one that you can one day pass on to your children, and your children's children after them, explaining to them how you, once upon a time, undertook a grand protestacular against the powers that be. I hope you enjoy and I invite you to e-mail me (brett.allin@gmail.com) or our mutual acquaintance if any questions or problems arise in the course of your reading. Thank you and I wish you all a lifetime of good books and positive relationships.

Sincerely,

Brett J. Allin


*PS.. here is the book, and a link to the wiki. Please enjoy, and to give you a few days lets reconvene on February 20th. I'll have the next book ready before then.

Good luck, and ENJOY!
kafka on the shore
Best Regards,

Andrew

Friday, January 9, 2009

Inaugural email

Hello and Welcome,

I am emailing Y'all as the first act in the conception of a book reading club. Feel free to forward this to anyone who you trust.

Let me first start by explaining and presenting the mission of this group: There are so many good books, and so many good people. As the people we know and love spread across the country and the world our correspondence will inevitably diminish; book reading is not a competition nor exposition but rather a method of communication. By reading what others are reading we will better connect with ourselves and each other. By connecting we will quickly and efficiently reach a higher state of consciousness.

That's it. That's all, nothing special. So here is how it will work, every month one of our diverse and unique members will choose and book. I will post it on the website and then we should all read it. There won't be any formal discussion, however you must talk to at least one person in the book-reading club and talk about the book (maybe a different person each month?). Anyway, my good friend Brett Allin will choose the first book. The club will officially start when I post his book on the website, which should be by the 15th of January. Please, send me any ideas you have or books you want to read and we will poll them on the website.

Hope everyone had a great new year and all that, and send me any emails of people you have forwarded this to then I can send them bulk emails.
Oh, and the website is funkyreadingclub.blogspot.com

Thats... http://funkyreadingclub.blogspot.com


Thanks, love, and all the rest...


Andrew D. Schwartz

This will be our blog site

This is where information will be set up so you can always see what we are reading this month. Also, we can have discussions on here. If that is what you are into...