Welcome to the AAUW Iowa Book Club

To share your thoughts on books you’ve read and participate in a discussion of books read by others:
Click on Join this site
This button is located on the lower right hand side of the screen. (You may have to scroll down to find this button)
If you have a Goggle, Twitter or Yahoo account
Click the appropriate button
Follow Sign in Instructions
You can follow this blog publicly (the default) or privately by selecting that option.
Click on Follow this Blog
This takes you to the last screen,
Click on Done
(If you DO NOT have any of the browsers listed,
Click on Create a new Goggle Account)
If you do not see the Join this site Button, Click on SIGN IN in the upper right hand corner and set up your account there.
This will take you to the blog and you can comment on the existing POSTS.
TO POST A BOOK REVIEW TO THE WEB PAGE
In order to post a book review to the blog, you need posting rights.
Send your email address to engerl@mchsi.com.
When I receive your email address, You will be added to the author’s list.
You will receive an email with instructions on how to get started with posting.
To Post – Sign In to the Site (Upper Right Hand Corner)
You should see AAUW BOOK CLUB
In the Upper Right Hand Corner you should see NEW POST
Clicking New Post will bring up the posting screen,
Enter a Title in the Post Title area
In the box below that, type in your post.
When you are finished, Click the preview button
If everything is what you want, you can Save the post.
The last step is Click on Publish.
If you have problems with the book club web site, send an email to engerl@mchsi.com

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

I appreciate your posts, Dorothy. I have not read either book.   When April is over I will be heading to the library for books to borrow and it helps to have some recommends.

Faith Sherman gave a very good review of Postville USA, the AAUW IA book selection this year, at the DSM Branch March meeting.  She brought new information since the book was published about Postville.  Two of the authors will be presenting at our April 20 conference.  Plan to attend.

Monday, March 19, 2012

The Fall of Giants.by Ken Follet

I will start with Ken Follet's book, The Fall of Giants.
I enjoyed this book as it was a good story with strong character depiction and I learned World War I history all at the same time. I appreciate the authors historical research and how he integrated the history with a good story. I was ignorant of much of the "Great War's" history, so made it even more interesting. Also frightening to learn how a war causing so much loss of life and destruction was really over probably preventable relatively unimportant events. It again seems another example of not learning from past history. Sandra

When I Found You by Catherine Ryan Hyde

A new novel that will stay on the fringes of your mind for a long time after you finish reading it, is When I Found You by Catherine Ryan Hyde. When Nathan McCann finds and saves a newborn baby abandoned in the woods, life changed for each of them. Nathan finds himself deeply drawn to the infant and makes a promise that the boy will never be abandoned again, and that he, Nathan McCann would always, under any circumstances, be there for the child, as a child, an adolescent and an adult. It is the effect of the depth and breadth of that promise on both their lives to an extent that could not have been expected, or even imagined, that forms the backbone of this thought-provoking story.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

My Temporary Life by Martin Crosbie

If you enjoy a book that is both non-predictable and interesting to the end, I recommend
My Temporary Life by Martin Crosbie When Malcolm was ten, his parents divorced, and Malcolm began spending the school year with his father in Scotland and his summers with his mother in Canada. It was then that he began thinking of his life as his temporary life--a life without permanence. His adventures with his school friend, Hardly, in Scotland are both bitter and sweet.  In Canada, he finds George and his sister, Rose, to give him a sense of worth to carry him into adulthood.  It is when Malcolm meets a colorful woman to really care about, that intrigue comes into his life, and he feels the peace of a regimented life turn to panic complete with a conflict with the law and a car chase.