The Groundwork Erie Book Club meets on the third Wednesday of the month at Werner Books & Coffee from 6-7pm.
All are welcome!
Join us!
Book Reviews & Analysis
Thanks to Derek DiMatteo for coordinating our book club and writing the followings reviews and analysis! Scroll down to read more.
Learning from The Dust Bowl
Timothy Egan’s well-researched book about the dust storms of the 1930s, The Worst Hard Time, is a history of the nation’s greatest environmental disaster. The main focus is 1929–1939 and the mismanagement of the land. Egan tells the stories of six families that moved to the high plains. These stories are told in narrative form based on careful research of historical records, interviews, and diary entries. It is fascinating and heartbreaking.
Wondering at Our Connections to the World Around Us
World of Wonders (2020) is a collection of brief nature memoir essays by poet and essayist Aimee Nezhukumatathil, accompanied by illustrations by Fumi Mini Nakamura. Subtitled “In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments,” the essays draw connections between the author’s life experiences and a wide range of flora and fauna, many of which are rare or endangered, and about which the essays often include interesting biological and botanical facts.
Reading Salvage the Bones as Ecofiction
Jesmyn Ward’s novel Salvage the Bones, National Book Award winner in 2011, is about a poor family in a Black community in rural Mississippi that is preparing for hurricane Katrina. The main storyline—a family drama with multiple subplots—unfolds in parallel to the impending storm, its climax coinciding with the storm’s brutal arrival, its denouement tenuously proffered in the storm’s aftermath.