So about three weeks ago I posted on the future of Hubski book clubs. The discussion there was varied and helpful, but the important distinction for me was that "fiction" and "non-fiction" were more useful than "book" and "all things sci fi."

In light of zebra2's observations, I'd like to put forth a few ground rules:

1) Book must be available free online or for less than $10.

2) Book must have at least 4 endorsements - if you see something good, recommend it, don't come up with something else, because we fragment too easily. Champion that thing. Make a guess as to how long it'll take to read, and why we should bother. "Because I've had it on my shelf for a while" does not cut it; "I added this to my shelf eight months ago because" is a much better place to argue from.

3) person who suggests the current book gets to run the club the next time.

4) Book must be something that a reasonably busy person can plow through in 4-5 weeks.

5) Fuck the shoutouts. Subscribe to the tag.

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I'm a let this congeal then judge whatever gets the highest vote.

c_hawkthorne:

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. I read it a few years ago and it was absolutely fantastic. 4 out of 5 stars on goodreads with 198,387 votes. I don't know if it's free anywhere, but amazon has it at $9.06. I'm sure libraries will have it too. It is right around 300 pages.


posted 3610 days ago