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Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Our Book List






        July - The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society

Mary Ann Shaffer

It's 1946 and author Juliet Ashton can't think what to write next. Out of the blue, she receives a letter from Dawsey Adams of Guernsey - by chance, he's acquired a book that once belonged to her - and, spurred on by their mutual love of reading, they begin a correspondence. When Dawsey reveals that he is a member of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, her curiosity is piqued and it's not long before she begins to hear from other members. As letters fly back and forth with stories of life in Guernsey under the German Occupation, Juliet soon realizes that the society is every bit as extraordinary as its name. 



         August - The Buddha of Subburbia

                                                        Hanif Kureishi

Karim lives with his Mum and Dad in a suburb of south London and dreams of making his escape to the bright lights of the big city. But his father is no ordinary Dad, he is 'the buddha of suburbia', a strange and compelling figure whose powers of meditation hold a circle of would-be mystics spellbound with the fascinations of the East.Among his disciples is the glamorous and ambitious Eva, and when 'the buddha of suburbia' runs off with her to a crumbling flat in Barons Court, Karim's life becomes changed in ways that even he had never dreamed of . .

chosen by Gerry Gallen


September - The Red House 

                                                    Mark Haddon

                                                                     
Family, that slippery word, a star to every wandering bark, and everyone sailing under a different sky. After his mother's death, Richard, a newly remarried hospital consultant, decides to build bridges with his estranged sister, inviting Angela and her family for a week in a rented house on the Welsh border. Four adults and four children, a single family and all of them strangers. Seven days of shared meals, log fires, card games and wet walks. But in the quiet and stillness of the valley, ghosts begin to rise up.

chosen by Olive Walsh


   October - Ship of Fools

                                                      Fintan O'Toole

For twenty years, Ireland's economic miracle was supposed to be the envy of the world. Low taxes, light regulation and an 'anything goes' attitude seemed to have created boundless prosperity. And then, as in Iceland, the glittering palaces vanished in the heat of the global financial meltdown. For years, those with economic power had been investing in a gigantic property bubble.
In Ship of Fools Fintan O'Toole tells the story of this dizzying rise and sickening fall. Ireland may have had a tiger economy, but those in charge of it had not lost their taste for sweetheart deals, back-handers and bribery. This is the essential analysis of Ireland's economic suicide.

chosen by Miriam Cotton


November - The Blackwater Lightship 

  Colm Toibin

Set in Ireland in the 1990s, the The Blackwater Lightship tells the story of the Devereux family. Helen doesn't get on with her mother Lily, and Lily doesn't get on with her mother Dora. Three generations of women, tetchy with recriminations and memory, are forced together when they discover that Helen's younger brother, Declan, is dying from an AIDS-related illness: "It was like a dark shadow in a dream, and then it became real and sharp."
chosen by Ann Donnelly


December - Alone in Berlin

  Hans Fallada

Berlin, 1940, and the city is filled with fear. At the house on 55 Jablonski Strasse, its various occupants try to live under Nazi rule in their different ways: the bullying Hitler loyalists the Persickes, the retired judge Fromm and the unassuming couple Otto and Anna Quangel. Then the Quangels receive the news that their beloved son has been killed fighting in France. Shocked out of their quiet existence, they begin a silent campaign of defiance, and a deadly game of cat and mouse develops between the Quangels and the ambitious Gestapo inspector Escherich. When petty criminals Kluge and Borkhausen also become involved, deception, betrayal and murder ensue, tightening the noose around the Quangels' necks ...

chosen by Bev Cotton

CFE Book Club Information Page


Our Book Club  is part of Clonakilty Favour Exchange and we always welcome new members.The book club is not linked to exchanging favours but you do have to be a CFE member to join us.

We meet on the second Thursday of every month (venue to be confirmed).Our meetings start at 7.30pm. 


Please click on our book list. These books were nominated by our members and drawn out of a hat for us by the author David Mitchell.

Books can be ordered via cfebookclub@gmail.com. We contact one of the book shops in Clonakilty and you collect and pay. By being a member of CFE book club you benefit from a 10% discount. Clonakilty Library can also order books provided they are given enough notice. You do need to be a library member.


At our meetings we expect our members to have respect for each others views and to listen as well as contribute.Usually, we ask the person whose book has been chosen to facilitate that meeting.Their role is to provide areas for discussion and guide us so everyone has opportunity to speak.


If you do not think you will be attending book club for the chosen month we ask that you let us know.

If you haven't managed to read the book that month you are still welcome.

For more information please contact us on cfebookclub@gmail.com or call Jo Lorriman on 0879024571.
Back to Book Club page



.

Mari Novak


Please call me MARI (mar ee) and happy to have landed in Clon/Glandore after working and traveling to about 100 countries.  I work with companies and organizations on performance improvement, and trying to develop many more practical and fun skills (see below).  I will be the one with the hat on!

Skills to Trade
I would like to offer some professional and personal skills.  Strategic and operational planning both for companies and nonprofits is one part of what I do professionally. Especially good at cleaning out closets -- and helping you let go of what no longer suits you!  Great at teaching you how to swim, any age. 


Lastly, I am pretty good at adventure: what would you like to see and do? (advice or comment)

Qualifications and experience
See above

Contact details

John Noonan


John here, from Clon’, living in Ahiohill. I work 1-day p/wk as a guitar teacher in Harte’s School of Music. I also play in a Blues band (One Horse Pony).  I have had lots of careers: Graphic Designer, Typesetter, IT Manager, Software engineer, Network engineer, Mathematical researcher and musician. 

Skills to Trade
Musician (Guitarist)
Graphic Design
Helping Hand –yes







Qualifications and experience
I have worked for many yrs as a graphic designer, especially in corporate design, brand-development, typesetting, and logo/album/book-cover design (see my online portfolio : www.john-noonan.com. I am a skilled lead and rhythm acoustic guitarist with 25yrs of passionate experience. Currently playing in One Horse Pony in Cork & West Cork. Check us out on www.facebook.com/OneHorsePony (Note: I’m not offering the services of the band, but will offer my own as a guitarist should someone need one).
 
Contact details
085-1165142

Ann Shaw


Hi, I’m Ann and I live near Union Hall and although it is a way from Clonakilty I think the Favours is a great idea and the further it spreads the better.  My life is full working on the land, particularly with trees.  

Skills to Trade
Advice on trees, planting, coppicing, etc.
Helping generally

Qualifications and experience
Gardening, Tree planting and coppicing




 


Contact details

Ronan Daly


Hello, my name is Ronan and I live near Long Strand. I worked as an engineer and project manager in the area of wind farm development for several years. I’m not sure whether my specific skills in this area will be of use to anyone, but I did gain a lot of experience at figuring technical, logistical and legal stuff out, and I would be happy to  throw my hand/head at anything. I also sing, play guitar and ukulele.
My main assets at the moment are time and a general openness to anything.



Skills to exchange
Guitar or beginner Ukulele lessons.
To discuss, advise or assist (if possible) with projects of any nature.
Although I am not particularly skilled in the areas of gardening/DIY. I would be delighted lend a hand to anyone in need.
Tutorials in Mariokart for the Super Nintendo (miss-spent childhood)

Qualifications and experience
Engineer with 10 years experience in wind farm development.

Contact details
0879724080

Deirdre Ni Laoghaire


Hi, I’m Deirdre.  I am a qualified teacher with 20 years experience in primary, secondary, and further education establishments in the UK. I returned to native Cork to continue work with community arts groups and to concentrate  more on my own textile work.  I sell in galleries and exhibit with the Cork Textile Network. http://www.corktextiles.com/

Skills to Exchange
General art and textile to children, people with cognitive problems or mental health issues







Qualifications and experience
BA Art
Teacher in art and textiles 15 years
Lecturer in Further Education
Diploma in Suicide Studies NUI Maynouth
Cert in Education
SEN (State Enrolled Nurse)

Contact details
deirdrebaynes@gmail.com
0238833770
0876625176