The book club meets once a month during "Talk of Iowa." Click through to find books and upcoming meeting dates.
January 19: Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut
“We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.” That’s the most famous quote from “Mother Night,” a strange, cautionary tale from Kurt Vonnegut. The novel is told in the first person by Howard W. Campbell Jr. as he awaits trial for war crimes. He is an American who was living in Germany when World War II broke out, recruited to serve by both Nazis and the Allied Forces. The book is set in the past, but feels timeless and relevant today.
February 16: The Queen's Gambit by Walter Tevis
At the age of eight, orphan Beth Harmon is quiet and withdrawn. That is, until she plays her first game of chess, proving herself a child protegee and finding her own sense of self and power for the first time in her young life. By her teens, Beth is competing in the U.S. Open championship and making a name for herself in the male-dominated world of competitive chess. But as her skill and international ranking grows, the stakes get higher, her isolation becomes deeper and the thought of escaping her world altogether becomes more intriguing. Whether you binged “The Queen’s Gambit” series on Netflix or just heard the hype, join us in reading the book that started it all.
March 23: The Overstory - Richard Powers
An ode to environmental activism and connection, the Overstory follows eight very different people unknowingly tied together by the lives and legacies of trees – some of which are rooted right here in Iowa. This book, which won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, is split into four sections: Roots, Trunks, Crowns and Seed; weaving the characters together through their relationships with the natural world.
April 20: An American Sunrise by Joy Harjo
In this collection, U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo returns to her family’s lands east of the Mississippi River two hundred years after the forced removal of the Mvskoke people. Harjo’s poems interrogate the historical erasure of the Mvskoke and other native people while finding strength and gratitude in the abundance of her homeland. “An American Sunrise” weaves Harjo’s personal story with tribal history and roots itself in the spirituality of her ancestors and righteous outrage over the historical atrocities committed against native people in the modern United States.
May 18: Little Faith - Nicholas Butler (All Iowa Reads adult selection)
Lyle Hovde and his wife Peg are thrilled when their estranged daughter Shiloh and her six-year-old son Isaac finally return to the family home in rural Wisconsin. But like any family reunion, the situation is complicated. In her absence, Shiloh has become deeply involved with an extremist church, courted by a devout pastor who believes Isaac has the spiritual ability to heal the sick. Over the course of a year, Lyle finds himself torn between his concern over his daughter’s growing religious extremism and his desire to keep his family close.
June 15: Kindred by Octavia Butler
It’s 1976 and the country is celebrating the Bicentennial. Dana, a young black woman, and her new husband, Kevin, a white man, have just moved into a new house in California. While she’s unpacking Dana is whisked away through time and space to Maryland in the early 1800s. Dana and Kevin shift back and forth through time and space as they experience the brutality of slavery and the reality of life when our nation was young. The novel is complex and compelling science and historical fiction that reveals some very deep truths about human nature and our history.
July 20: Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo
Written in a richly lyrical novel-in-verse format, “Clap When You Land” follows the lives of Camino and Yahaira Rios, half-sisters separated by language, culture and country for most of their lives but brought together by the sudden death of their father. Through shared grief, the two teenagers are forced to face what it means to be a family while exploring the power and pressures of culture, class and privilege. “Clap When You Land” is written for a young adult audience, but its thoughtful prose and compelling characters invite readers of all ages.
August 17: The Life And Times of the Thunderbolt Kid by Bill Bryson
Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines in 1951, smack dab in the middle of the Baby Boom generation. Like many so-called Boomers, Bryson grew up with a grand vision of becoming a crime-fighting superhero, and lived out his dreams by racing around his neighborhood in a homemade cape, dubbing himself “The Thunderbolt Kid.” This persona is the foundation for a touching and hilarious memoir that follows Bryson’s childhood and family life in Iowa through the 1950s and 60s penned in vivid and relatable observation.
September 21: Black Eagle Child: The Facepaint Narratives by Ray Young Bear
This is a coming-of-age novel that follows the life of Edgar Bearchild through the decades of the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s. The novel is semi-autobiographical. Bearchild grows up in the Black Eagle Child Community, a fictional stand in for the Meskwaki Settlement near Tama where Young Bear grew up and now lives. The novel is told in a combination of verse, prose and letters. Young Bear excels at illustrating what it’s like to straddle two very different cultures that exist simultaneously around and within his characters. It is at times funny, poignant and heartbreaking.
October 19: An American Marriage by Tayari Jones
Roy and Celestial are young, black, urban professionals living in Atlanta, Georgia. He’s a businessman and she’s a gifted artist. The book starts as an exploration of the kinds of challenges that any couple might experience in a marriage, the weight of secrets untold and paths untaken, but the book takes a sharp turn when Roy is accused of a serious crime he did not commit. It’s a beautifully written and resonant account of complicated relationships and an illustration of how systemic racism shapes the characters' lives in powerful ways beyond their control. Jones earned her master's degree at the University of Iowa.
November 16: My Antonia by Willa Cather
Published in 1918 “My Antonia” is a classic that brings the pioneer experience of the Midwest to life. Told as a flashback, the story begins as two young people arrive in Nebraska to build new lives. Jim Burden is newly orphaned and traveling to live with his grandparents on their farm. Antonia Shimerda is traveling with her Bohemian immigrant family, seeking a new life on the prairie. In telling the characters’ stories of growth, hardship and connection the book explores issues of class, gender and what it means to be American.
December 21: The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
This is a novel of mothers and daughters divided by culture and time, but connected through love. The book is told through sixteen interwoven stories that explore the experiences and identities of Chinese immigrant mothers and their first-generation American daughters. It is captivating and powerful from start to finish, filled with heartbreak and hope. This beautifully crafted book will resonate with anyone who has or is a mother or a daughter.
February: "The Twelve Tribes of Hattie" - Ayana Mathis (Fiction)
April: "A Sand County Almanac" - Aldo Leopold (Non-Fiction)
May: "Eligible" - Curtis Sittenfeld (Fiction)
June 10: Delights and Shadows - Ted Kooser (Poetry)
July 9: Little House on the Prairie - Laura Ingalls Wilder / The Birchbark House - Louise Erdrich (Fiction)
August 12: Storm Lake – Art Cullen (Non-Fiction)
September 9: The Mothers- Brit Bennett (The 2020 All Iowa Reads selection for adult readers)
October 12: The House on Mango Street - Sandra Cisneros (Fiction)
November 11: Crossing to Safety - Wallace Stegner (Fiction)
December 16: Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression – Mildred Armstrong Kalish (Non-Fiction)
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"The Overstory," weaves together the stories of its human characters, but also explores how all our lives are interwoven with the natural world.
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Before it was a Netflix hit, “The Queen’s Gambit” was a 1983 novel written by University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop graduate Walter Tevis.
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First published in 1961, then republished several years later from Iowa City, Kurt Vonnegut’s “Mother Night” explores issues of morality, humanity and individual responsibility in the aftermath of World War II. While the book explores an era of misinformation and mass tragedy decades in the past, the themes feel eerily relevant to the state of affairs in 2021.
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Season 1 in its entirety has dropped into podcast feeds, and season 2 episodes will begin populating at the end of every month in 2021, beginning in January.
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Charity Nebbe is joined by members of the Talk of Iowa Book Club team to discuss the 2021 reading list.
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“Little Heathens: Hard Times and High Spirits on an Iowa Farm During the Great Depression” by Mildred Armstrong Kalish is a delightful and detailed account of early farm life; full of memories, recipes and family.
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Book clubs are fun for a lot of reasons. They are an excuse to read something new – something you might not have picked up on your own. They are a great opportunity to visit with friends. But, what if you could invite the smartest, most insightful people you can think of to have a candid conversation about a great book? That’s what I get to do on the Talk of Iowa Book Club. And you’re invited. Coming soon from Iowa Public Radio.
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Whether you’re looking for a new series for your middle reader, your child’s new favorite picture book, or a compelling graphic novel for your teen, there’s never been a better time to give the gift of reading.
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It’s Talk of Iowa’s annual holiday books show! Jan Weismiller and Tim Budd of Prairie Lights Books in Iowa City and Kathy Magruder of Pageturners Bookstore in Indianola join host Charity Nebbe to guide listeners through their top book recommendations for adult readers.
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“Crossing to Safety” by Pulitzer Prize winner Wallace Stegner was published in 1987. It was Stegner’s final novel and a beautiful, life affirming way to end a storied career.
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The October meeting of the Talk of Iowa Book Club discusses "The House on Mango Street," by Sandra Cisneros
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It’s the September meeting of the Talk of Iowa book club. Host Charity Nebbe is joined by Shanna Benjamin, an independent scholar with a specialization in Black women writers; Roslin Thompson, library director at Knoxville Public Library and poet Emily Spencer to discuss this New York Times Best Seller and All Iowa Reads 2020 selection.