NorthernLight
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern BC
We decided to start a nonfiction book club at our library. The "book club sets" (5 copies of the same book) at our library are all fiction, but the librarian said we could use nonfiction books that are available online. If we want free, this means public domain (old books).
Of course hard copies are preferable. Personally I can't afford to buy books. Those who can afford them would have to buy them online, as our town has no bookstores.
We found out that we can order nonfiction book club sets from the regional library system. Yay! But. Turns out they're all memoirs, with the exception of one pop psychology book. I do not want to read about Michelle Obama, or someone's personal battles with addiction, poverty, etc. And neither do the others.
I looked online to see what books other nonfiction book clubs are reading, and it's the same kind of thing.
We live in a small backwater. There are 5 of us. How is it that we're the only people in Canada who want to read great works (classic or modern) about science, anthropology, philosophy, etc?
/rant. Thank you for reading.
Of course hard copies are preferable. Personally I can't afford to buy books. Those who can afford them would have to buy them online, as our town has no bookstores.
We found out that we can order nonfiction book club sets from the regional library system. Yay! But. Turns out they're all memoirs, with the exception of one pop psychology book. I do not want to read about Michelle Obama, or someone's personal battles with addiction, poverty, etc. And neither do the others.
I looked online to see what books other nonfiction book clubs are reading, and it's the same kind of thing.
We live in a small backwater. There are 5 of us. How is it that we're the only people in Canada who want to read great works (classic or modern) about science, anthropology, philosophy, etc?
/rant. Thank you for reading.