Catherine O'Flynn: Reading Groups I Have Known
Today's guest blogger is Catherine O'Flynn, the author of What Was Lost, the story of a young girl's disappearance in Birmingham, England, and how the unsolved mystery still reverberates two decades later. Catherine talks about how she was almost a member of a reading group and reveals the 10 things she has learned from speaking with book clubs about her debut novel. Click here to watch a video of Catherine discussing What Was Lost.
I think it's safe to say that I've enjoyed more success with reading groups as a writer than as a reader. That shouldn't be interpreted as a boast; my single experience as a reading group member was, like many of my experiences, short lived and baffling. I was living inSpain at the time and saw a poster in the local library for an English-speaking book group. The group was well-established and met in the same bar on the same day each month. I went along to a meeting and met the six or so women that made up the group and who were as pleasant and welcoming as you might hope.
I went away and diligently read the first 500 pages of Don Quixote as instructed. I returned the next month, but no one else showed up. A month later it was still just me, the equally puzzled bar-owner and a tired-looking leg of jamon. Despite the fact that we lived in a small town I never saw any of the women again. The only possible conclusion is that I was such an appalling prospect as a reading group member that they not only disbanded the group but also all relocated to another part of the world, possibly changing their identities along the way. I never could bring myself to finish Don Quixote.
The beauty of being a writer, of course, is that I only ever attend one meeting of each book group, and so if I am continuing to wreak this devastating havoc on literary clubs, I at least don't know about it. Since What Was Lost came out in the UK last year I've spoken to many reading groups --- lots in libraries, some in shops, a few in peoples' homes, one in a medieval guild hall, and one, inevitably given the book's setting, in a disused unit in a shopping mall.
Here are ten things I've learned about reading groups:
I think it's safe to say that I've enjoyed more success with reading groups as a writer than as a reader. That shouldn't be interpreted as a boast; my single experience as a reading group member was, like many of my experiences, short lived and baffling. I was living in
I went away and diligently read the first 500 pages of Don Quixote as instructed. I returned the next month, but no one else showed up. A month later it was still just me, the equally puzzled bar-owner and a tired-looking leg of jamon. Despite the fact that we lived in a small town I never saw any of the women again. The only possible conclusion is that I was such an appalling prospect as a reading group member that they not only disbanded the group but also all relocated to another part of the world, possibly changing their identities along the way. I never could bring myself to finish Don Quixote.
The beauty of being a writer, of course, is that I only ever attend one meeting of each book group, and so if I am continuing to wreak this devastating havoc on literary clubs, I at least don't know about it. Since What Was Lost came out in the UK last year I've spoken to many reading groups --- lots in libraries, some in shops, a few in peoples' homes, one in a medieval guild hall, and one, inevitably given the book's setting, in a disused unit in a shopping mall.
Here are ten things I've learned about reading groups:
- There is always food and drink. This feels vaguely transgressive given that the meetings are often in libraries or shops where eating and drinking are otherwise prohibited.
- The food may range from delicious home made soup and cakes to a few stale biscuits but somewhere, at some point, the Doritos will always emerge.
- I've yet to find a reading group that hasn't read The Kite Runner. I'm investigating a link between Khaled Hosseini and Doritos.
- There is always one member of the reading group who hasn't finished the book. The rest of the group will spend the whole session carefully avoiding giving the ending away.
- The ending is always given away.
- Although it varies from group to group, in general, women book group members outnumber men by a ratio of roughly 10 to 1; retired members outnumber working members 2 to 1.
- Despite this, the average 60-year-old female reading group member has no difficulty in empathizing with the character of a little girl detective, or a young male security guard, or a bored music store manager, or indeed it seems with anyone at any point in time.
- It seems then that preconceptions about target markets and genre preferences are not terribly useful.
- It's almost as if readers are not faceless constituents of a demographic but individuals with imaginations.
- I suspect some don't even like Doritos.
1 Comments:
I got a chuckle out of your first book group experience as a participant. That would have given me a complex.
The book group I am in does not have food or drink associated with it. We meet in a library so food and drink are not allowed.. we still manage to survive though!
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