Tag Archive for discussion

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.

Asshole Rules Can Be Fun for Starting Book Clubs

The No Asshole Rule by Robert Sutton will certainly test the strength of your book club to accept creative subject matter, generate lively discussion and deal with an issue that may or may not resonate with your book club members.

Robert Sutton has candidly put forward his observance of the tolerance behaviors that many companies demonstrate regarding the assholes who roam their halls and supervise others.

When we discussed this book during our monthly book club meeting, each one of us had one or more real life examples of assholes we have had to deal with in our work lives. In fact, one member had a front-burner situation regarding assholes who are currently making her work environment pretty miserable.  We all rallied with a variety of solutions and responses to the jerks in her world.  And, yes, one of our suggestions had something to do with the tires of the jerks’ cars.

The rest of us talked about how we faced off to the troublemakers in our careers and found that often we had handled the assholes well and at other times, we missed an opportunity to be a hero and save some souls.  Assholes as supervisors cause an inordinate amount of damage to employee morale and overall profitability.

The author of this book was artful at providing a variety of diplomatic actions to take to deal with assholes in a work culture.  In the long run, businesses that hope to be successful must learn to flush the assholes from their culture and keep the doors barred against new ones who try to get in.  We all cheered when reading about the companies who are serious about instigating and enforcing a no asshole rule in their culture.  Wouldn’t that be ideal?

This book club selection was a great test of the mettle of our members and it appears we all passed, possibly because we set up a no asshole rule when starting our book club.

To see our other book club selections, check out the Hot Picks page of this site.

Secrets of Eden is controversial for starting book clubs

Our book club recently read Secrets of Eden by Chris Bohjalian. Some of us loved the read; others did not. But what surprised me is the variety of interpretations we had about characters in the book and messages from the author.

One of the biggest benefits of a good book club is hearing other points of view when reading books. This particular experience led us to a discussion about whether or not the author is against religion.

If you have also read Secrets of Eden, would you care to comment about our controversy? What do you think?

Do you think the author is:
A. Definitely against Religion
B. Not necessarily against Religion
C. Have no idea

If you haven’t read the book, you can click below and buy it directly from Amazon. Then check back with us and let us know what you think!