In this year of Pandemic and Social Distancing, I am part of more book groups than ever in my life. Most of the discussions are on Zoom, but also on the phone. Zoom is not as much fun as talking in person, but distance does not matter, so I can connect with people in Germany as easily as here in Lancaster.
ESL Book Group
Four years ago, I volunteered with a local ESL (English as a Second Language) group run by Andrea Bailey. While volunteering I met Sarah Gingrich and
Emily Burgett. We talked about books sometimes and asked each other about books we read or wanted to read. We ended up reading the same books, then getting together to talk about them. We became with a book about a Russian Holy Fool. The book is a novel titled
Lazarus.
From there we have read books about faith, the plague, and many other topics. Other people have joined depending on the book. In the past two years, Andrea moved to Wisconsin and Emily moved to Massachusetts then joined the Army, but with Zoom we can still meet. This summer, in the midst of the pandemic, we discussed
Decameron. For that discussion, we were joined by Chelsea Pomponio, a professor whose research is in Medieval Italian Literature focusing on Boccaccio. After
Decameron our book was
Love in the Time of Cholera. As part of that discussion, Sarah Reisert gave us an impassioned critique of that book as beautifully written sexism, racism, child molesting and promotion of patriarchy. It was delightful. I love a negative review. In October we talked about
Free Will by Mark Balaguer. The next book is
Breaking Bread with the Dead by Alan Jacobs. It is not a book about sharing Avacado Toast with Zombies.
The World Conquest Book Club
This summer I talked with a former co-worker who returned to the library and museum where we both worked as a director. We were talking about leadership and decided to start a monthly book group to prepare Michelle to go from director of the library to ruling the entire world. We settled on six books that would be the basis of world domination. Naturally, the first was
The Prince by Machiavelli. Next was
The Art of War by Sun Tzu, followed by Plato’s
Republic and a critique of
Republic by Karl Popper called
The Open Society and its Enemies. In November we will read
Lioness a biography of Golda Meir. I have been promised a cabinet position in the Michelle World Government.
Writers in Residences
This is a monthly book group organized by the Jewish Community Alliance in Lancaster in cooperation between local Synagogues. This month we are reading Witness: Lessons from Elie Wiesel’s Classroom by Ariel Burger. It will be the first time I am participating in this new format. We will discuss each book with the author. So Ariel Burger will be on the Zoom call. In February I will be introducing the author Raffi Berg as we discuss his book Red Sea Spies: The True Story of the Mossad's Fake Diving Resort.
Pre-COVID, the Hillel group on the campus of Franklin and Marshall College had book discussion group during the normal academic year that I would attend when I could.
The Evolution Roundtable
This group has met Monday’s at Noon on the campus of Franklin and Marshall College since the early 1990s. Most regular attendees are retired professors, along with some current professors, and members of the community like me. I joined about a decade ago. Each semester the group reads a book about some aspect of evolution. The current book is
The Deep History of Ourselves: The Four-Billion-Year Story of How We Got Consciousness. In past years we have read books on many aspects of evolution including
The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins,
Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari, and, of course,
The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin. In the late 90s Stephen Jay Gould joined the group for one of its meetings.
Virtual Reading Group: The Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College
Like the Evolution Roundtable, this group meets weekly to discuss books by the
philosopher Hannah Arendt. We are currently finishing
Essay in Understanding: Formation, Exile and Totalitarianism 1930-1954. The 90-minute discussions have a lot of context and background and different interpretations. The group will start again in January looking at
The Promise of Politics followed by the book I most admire of all Arendt’s works
The Human Condition. I have written on every page of the copy I read in 2012.
Torah Study
Each Saturday morning my
Synagogue has Torah Study. The book each week is The Torah. We go through in a cycle determined by the Hebrew calendar. This group is very different on Zoom than in person. In the Synagogue, Rabbi Jack Paskoff clarifies points in the Torah using his white board and explaining often ambiguous Hebrew. On Zoom the Rabbi has to manage the discussion much more than in person.
The New York CS Lewis Society
I joined the
NYCSL Society in 1979. Since 1980 I have been able to go to monthly meetings once or twice a year to the meetings in NYC. Last year I went to the 50th anniversary celebration on Long Island. I have not been to a meeting this year but hope to join the Zoom meeting this month. It will be a discussion of books by Lewis and G.K.Chesterton written in wartime.
Books with Friends
I am also reading books with friends on topics we agree and disagree about. A very sincere friend from Greece who is living in Germany asked me to read a book with him about Trump: Evangelicals at the Crossroads: Will We Pass the Trump Test?
I like
Dmitri, so I read the book. I hated the book but discussed why with Dmitri and with our mutual friend
Cliff. Following that book, Cliff and I are reading a book on abortion titled
Beyond the Binaries by Thomas Horrocks. We will be discussing it next week.
Another friend, Christina Hu, and I are talking about creating a podcast. This summer we discussed basing the podcast on books about America, its place in the world, and its effect on the world. We read
Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War and
Band of Brothers. We are now talking about something different than a book-centered podcast. But the books led to some really good discussions.