If you’re a writer, chances are you’re a reader too. And if you’re not, I’d like to talk to you about it because frankly, I find that very strange. I think most writers are reading something pretty much all of the time. We bemoan the fact that reading can interfere with our writing productivity (so many books!), but we can’t seem to help ourselves. Reading takes your mind out of your own project, it takes time away from the keyboard, and it usually leads to the opening of more books. But it must be done.
For over ten years, I’ve been in a book club that branched off from a local moms’ club when all of our kids were still toddling around. Back then the early evening hours seemed a perfect time to escape the house, right when kids were melting down, pre-bedtime, needing snacks, baths and just one more story. Things have changed and in some ways, it’s even more hectic for some of us now. Our once-prompt group now filters in over the course of the first hour. I think we mostly come for the wine—that much has stayed the same. We’ve had laughs and arguments, quiet nights and adventures, books we hated, books we loved and lots of books that fell somewhere in the middle. So if you’re reading anyway, join a book club! Why, you ask, would I add something else to my schedule when I never get enough writing done anyway? Well, here are eight reasons:
1. It gets you out of the house. Reading, writing—both
solitary endeavors. If you emerge from your home most days, blinking into the
sunshine like a mole and unable to produce an intelligible spoken sentence, you need
to get out more. Books are your friends but they’re not your friends; do you know what I mean?
2. It forces you to read things out of your genre.
Even if you roll your eyes when a club member chooses that science fiction book,
it may teach you something about pacing, or plotting, or science! Free your mind.
3. It makes you realize that readers are
unpredictable and individual, and you’ll never please all of them. Believe it
or not, this actually comes as a relief! If you’re with a group
long enough, you’ll start predicting how certain people will feel about certain
books and after more time, you’ll realize that you’re seldom right. So many
things play into the reader’s experience: timing, personal taste, annoying
children. You just have to write and hope for a majority.
4. You can impose your tastes onto others. Yes, you
can make everyone read those classics you loved in school! You can choose
experimental fiction you don’t even like yourself, just for the guilty pleasure
of seeing the veins in your clubmates’ foreheads bulge while they eviscerate
them.
5. You may find a couple of good beta readers. If
you’re a smart cookie, you’ll pick a club with other smart cookies. Some of
these may agree, with bribing, to read something you’ve written. This is good,
very good.
6. Someone else makes food for you once a month.
This is an important one and related to #7. Think about this. You show up, food’s
there. You just sit and eat it.
7. Someone buys wine (or something else) for you to
drink. Same principle as #6, only better.
8. You can come up with all sorts of side-events for your book club. Field trips to see movies or plays based on books, dinners out, even trips to celebrate a club’s anniversary, as mine did last fall. All of this is expanded from the principle of #1, which involves getting you out of the house! You may not be ready for these bigger steps right away and let’s face it—those book club girls can be crazy (or is it just mine?)—but start at least with the first thing. Find some people to talk about books with. Not the internet. In person. With food, preferably. And wine.
8. You can come up with all sorts of side-events for your book club. Field trips to see movies or plays based on books, dinners out, even trips to celebrate a club’s anniversary, as mine did last fall. All of this is expanded from the principle of #1, which involves getting you out of the house! You may not be ready for these bigger steps right away and let’s face it—those book club girls can be crazy (or is it just mine?)—but start at least with the first thing. Find some people to talk about books with. Not the internet. In person. With food, preferably. And wine.
Yay! I love being in a group with you (although now that I understand #4 there is far more science fiction in your future)!!
ReplyDeleteWell I have never DONE any of those things. Only saying that you COULD...
ReplyDeleteJoining a book club is definitely on my list once I move and get settled. I've joined writer's groups, but have yet to take the book club plunge. I suppose one reason why is after teaching literature to high school students all day, the last thing I wanted to do was discuss it even more! However, all the reasons you list make me want to get jump started on finding one that fits.
ReplyDelete