Archive for Book Club Book Criteria

Book Club Book Criteria – New

The book clubs that include me as a member have criteria for selecting our books but that criteria is general in nature.  For instance, one book club reads books that contribute to our professional and personal development because all of us are business owners wanting to stay on top of business issues and keep our businesses thriving.  That book selection criteria generally eliminates a lot of book types such as: cook books, mysteries, novels, fiction, travel, pets, comics, etc.  As a result, we have all strengthened our businesses, learned from each other and filtered out the nuggets of wisdom from experts who have written books about business.

Another book club I am in contemplates reading books that have been recommended to us by other book clubbers or that look enticing.  We collect a long list that includes brief descriptions.  Then we vote on the ones we will schedule for our year, making sure we get a good variety.  It’s all so democratic and works quite well.

None of my book clubs talk about what we want the book to DO for us in specific terms.  In reading a recent book, I have come up with a new criteria that I want to look for in other book selections.

I just completed Flash Foresight by Daniel Burrus and am completely and totally revved up.  After I read about one quarter of the way through the book, I wanted to abandon it because I had so many ideas and just couldn’t sit still.  I persevered and completed the book and kept getting revved up more and more after each chapter.  Now – hold me back!

Here’s the book I am discussing.  If you want to click below and buy it through Amazon, I’d love you for it because I would get a few pennies, but what I REALLY want from you is a revved up discussion.

I am feverishly looking for others who have read this book so that we can discuss how it has changed us. My mind has been expanded in so many ways about how we can approach and have control over our future.  This book has seriously affected my approach to getting a new game I have developed out to the marketplace (more about that later).

I have put the pressure on my daughter-in-law to read the book (she’s quite a reader) for my own selfish need to discuss this brilliant and exciting book.

So my recommendation to all my book clubs and to all book clubs around the world is to build a list of criteria that you wish your books will meet.  This criteria might include:

1.  learn more about a topic or issue

2.  be inspired to do something differently

3.  learn what not to do

4.  find content that stimulates thought

5.  read a book that simply makes you feel good about something (love, life, family, earth…)

6.  read a book about an issue dear to you

7.  learn about other people and cultures

8.  read a book that inspires discussion

9.  read a book that is opposite of your own views

10.  READ A BOOK THAT GETS YOU SO REVVED UP!

If you read Flash Foresight and want to tell me how it changed your approach to your future, please please let me know!  I want to hear from you.

Starting Book Clubs in Five Easy Steps

It should not be difficult to start a book club yet most book lovers want to do this right.  We have the perfect guidelines in five easy steps.

Step one: Establish your Theme

To start your own book club, you will determine the theme or the direction your club will take.  It’s an important part of your book club’s identity to make a commitment to the kinds of books your group will or will not read.  Under Themes, we have presented a variety of book club themes we encountered in our research on starting book clubs.  The Theme will have a direct impact on the kinds of members who will be attracted to your club.

For instance, not all women are interested in joining a book club with an established theme of Women’s Issues, however, if that’s an area of interest that you want to explore, you will need to disclose to your prospective members the specific focus of your new club.

Step two: Determine the kinds of reading material you will explore:  hardback books, paperbacks, eBooks or audio books.  Some clubs are reading only hardcover books while others have decided to allow any kind of book material into their club.  You decide.

Step three: How will your club function?  In other words, what are the guidelines or rules (if any)?  In the Club Guidelines section, we present several variations from which you can choose.  At this point, you will determine if you will meet face-to-face as a group or remotely through computers, chats, email, or perhaps by video or telephone conferencing.  This will help frame who can be a member and who cannot.

Step four: Invite members.  Look for the right number of people who fit your criteria and extend offers to them.  You must have a clear understanding of their level of commitment to the group experience so that all your expectations can be set.

Step five: Pick a book and start reading!

How can we talk about books without including Amazon.com!  There are many other sources of fine books at great prices but you can search for anything on Amazon right from here.

You might find inspiration from the trailer on the Jane Austen Book Club movie you can see on our Videos page.