March 2013 Many had a bit of a sticky start with The Marsh Arabs by Wilfred Thesiger. A couple in our group found this tall gaunt Etonian arrogant, presumptuous and tedious, not to mention chauvinistic. One reader was prompted to...
Disgrace by J M Coetzee
January 2013 Everyone who started Disgrace finished it - no passes, which says a lot, though the most common phrase of the evening was, 'well, I can't truthfully say I enjoyed it,' but points were high. Beautifully written, it is...
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
December 2012 Though quite a few liked the book, no one loved A Visit from the Goon Squad. Some chapters had been previously published as short stories and the novel interweaves a long list of people, times and places with...
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
November 2012 This was our first book for which points never dropped below 8. We all thought Harper Lee created unforgettable characters and scenes; we liked the fact that it was unsentimental and could be funny at the same time....
Scoop by Evelyn Waugh
September 2012 Some 70+ years after being published, as far as we know it is still impossible to find a journalist that hasn't read and enjoyed Scoop. A few in our group were a bit sceptical. They compared it to...
The Quiet American by Graham Greene
June 2012 Greene was already a prolific and popular novelist when he spent the winters of 1951-54 in French Indochina as a war correspondent for The Times where he wrote and set this novel. At its core is a friendship...
Perfume: The Story of A Murderer by Patrick Süskind
October 2011 Perfume is a story that generated some controversy on the night of our meeting. It could almost be called a page turner. The book is concisely constructed and beautifully written, with a serial killer who provokes a morbid fascination. But it is outlandish, a tale of supernatural...
Imperium by Robert Harris
August 2011 Imperium surprised us. It tells the colorful history of Marcus Tullius Cicero's rise to political prominence in the last decades of the Roman Republic. There was probably never a time when fame, fortune and power were more intricately interwoven. We've all learned that democracy began in...
Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
July 2011 The wonderful thing about reading classics for a book group is that the members can compare their previous reading of the story with a more mature perspective, and those that have never read it can see whether it...
Saturday by Ian McEwan
May 2011 On a Saturday like any Saturday in London February 2003 the neurosurgeon Henry Perowne goes about his business. Anticipating his daughter's arrival from the continent, he buys some fish for dinner; he is delayed by a Peace March,...