Category: book club picks

The Wonder Test discussion questions

The Wonder Test discussion questions

Is your book club reading THE WONDER TEST? Here are a few questions to kick off your discussion.

THE WONDER TEST examines the lengths a community will go for excellence. What do you think of the real-life academic pressures kids face? Are the pressures different than when you were growing up? Also, have you noticed any change in the way families in your community, or perhaps your own family, handle stress and pressure—whether it be in academics, sports, career, or simply lifestyle—in the past year and a half?

Lina and Rory are suffering two losses at the book’s opening, the death of two people important to both of them. How realistic is the book’s portrayal of loss and coping? What might you have done differently in Lina’s situation? What might you have done similarly?

Lina Connerly and her husband, Fred, made one choice when they decided to become parents: that they would always answer their child truthfully. What do you think of this approach? Is it sensible? Is it even possible? If you have children or nieces/nephews, how do you handle their difficult questions?

One of the primary themes of THE WONDER TEST is that the correct thing to do is not always the right thing to do. At one point, Lina says of her parenting, “I’m probably doing everything wrong. Still, it seems to work.” What is something you have done “wrong” or against common wisdom that has nonetheless worked for you?

What scene or line in the book resonated most with you? Why?

What character from the book would you least or most want to know in real life? If you had to spend a weekend with either Lina Connerly or George Voss, who would you choose?

Did you attempt to answer any of the test questions posed at the beginning of the chapters? What was your favorite question, or the one most memorable to you, and why?

The Marriage Pact is the new Richard & Judy Book Club Thriller

The Marriage Pact is the new Richard & Judy Book Club Thriller

I’m over the moon that The Marriage Pact is one of 8 books selected for spring 2018 Richard and Judy Book Club. The biggest book club in the UK, Richard & Judy Book Club editions are sold at WH Smith stores and feature additional content for book clubs.

Richard says, “The Marriage Pact is at once a genuine love story and grim contemplation of the real nature of marriage: possession, jealousy, and control. It’s extreme but grippingly though-provoking.”

Judy says, “You know the kind of thing: make sure your spouse knows you love him by giving him a thoughtful gift from time to time; always answer the phone when he calls; make sure you go away together on frequent small romantic breaks. Sounds sensible – but be afraid. Be very afraid.”

If you’re in the UK, you can pick up the Richard and Judy Book Club edition at WH Smith or the airport. If you’re not in the UK, you can still read Richard & Judy feature content online:

Richard & Judy’s review of The Marriage Pact

WHSmith Book Club Questions

5 Companion Books (and one great film) to go with The Marriage Pact

I’m working my way through all of the selections, and I’ve yet to be disappointed! Here’s the complete Richard and Judy Book Club list for spring 2018:

Then She Was Gone, by Lisa Jewell

The Thirst, by Jo Nesbo

How to Stop Time, by Matt Haig

The Child, by Fiona Barton

The Marriage Pact, by Michelle Richmond

The Heart’s Invisible Furies, by John Boyne

The Witch Finder’s Sister, by Beth Underdown

Close to Home, by Cara Hunter

Find your next book club book

Find your next book club book

FOUR BOOK CLUB FAVORITES THAT ARE SURE TO SPARK DISCUSSION

Michelle Richmond’s novels are a favorite among book groups. Choose from four critically acclaimed novels that combine page-turning action with philosophical quandaries about the complexities of marriage, sisterhood, parenting, and more. Every paperback includes an extensive playlist, author Q&A, and reading group guide.

GOLDEN STATE: A literary thriller, and a love story

When a hostage crisis breaks out at the Veterans Administration Hospital on the day that California is voting on whether or not to secede from the union, Dr. Julie Walker must save her sister, and herself, from the violent intentions of an obsessed former patient. Read Golden State. “Mesmerizing and intricate, Richmond’s dissection of California on the violent brink of secession from the nation provides the backdrop for her deeper inspection of the uneasy, fragile relations between siblings.” Booklist, starred review

NO ONE YOU KNOW: “A thoroughly riveting literary thriller” (Booklist, starred review) about math and murder 

A Stanford math prodigy is murdered while working on a centuries-old mathematical mystery. A fame-hungry professor writes a bestselling true crime book about the murder, and the accused man’s life is ruined. Twenty years later, the mathematician’s sister sets out to discover the truth behind her sister’s murder. Read No One You Know, a selection of the Literary Guild and the Mystery Guild. “A thoroughly riveting literary thriller.” Booklist, starred review

THE YEAR OF FOG: A girl goes missing on a San Francisco beach…
A girl goes missing on a San Francisco beach while in the care of Abby, her soon-to-be stepmother. Try the New York Times bestseller The Year of Fog, a Kirkus Reviews Top Pick for Reading Groups, a Target Bookmarked Book Club Pick, a Silicon Valley Reads all-city read, and a major bestseller in France.

DREAM OF THE BLUE ROOM: The murder of a gay teenager in a small Alabama town reverberates decades later.
It is the the beginning of the 21st century, and China’s massive Three Gorges Dam is nearing completion. Jenny takes a journey up the Yangtze River to honor Amanda Ruth, her childhood friend who was murdered decades before. Along for the journey is Jenny’s estranged husband. An erotically charged novel about the stories we can’t erase. Read Dream of the Blue Room. “Intelligent, original, complex.” The San Francisco Chronicle

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