Book Club

Book Club discussions are held in the church library from 10:10 -10:50 a.m. on the 3rd Sunday of each month, unless otherwise noted. All Book Club books are available in the church library, or click on the book link and purchase a copy through Amazon.com. Join the group any time - for all the book discussions, occasionally when a certain book interests you, or even if you haven't read the book! Find out more about Lake Edge book groups, library and other reading-related items. Questions? Contact Bonnie Holmes

Click here to see past Book Club books.

September Book Club

The Heretic's Wife by Brenda Rickman Vantrease

From the king’s lavish banquet halls to secret dungeons and the inner sanctums of Thomas More, Brenda Rickman Vantrease’s glorious new novel illuminates the public pageantry and the private passions of men and women of conscience in treacherous times.

August Book Club

Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks

When Pulitzer Prize winner Geraldine Brooks came to live on Martha's Vineyard in 2006, she ran across a map by the island's native Wampanoag people that marked the birthplace of Caleb, first Native American to graduate of Harvard College--in 1665. Her curiosity piqued, she unearthed and fleshed out his thin history, immersing herself in the records of his tribe, of the white families that settled the island in the 1640s, and 17th-century Harvard. In Caleb's Crossing, Brooks offers a compelling answer to the riddle of how--in an era that considered him an intellectually impaired savage--he left the island to compete with the sons of the Puritanical elite.

July Book Club

Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

De Rosnay's U.S. debut fictionalizes the 1942 Paris roundups and deportations, in which thousands of Jewish families were arrested, held at the Vélodrome d'Hiver outside the city, then transported to Auschwitz.

June Book Club

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

From a single, abbreviated life grew a seemingly immortal line of cells that made some of the most crucial innovations in modern science possible. And from that same life, and those cells, Rebecca Skloot has fashioned in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks a fascinating and moving story of medicine and family, of how life is sustained in laboratories and in memory.
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