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  • London Book Club

  • By Sophie Harris

  • Time Out goes to the boozer to talk prostitutes, dogs and monsters with the capital‘s least pretentious bunch of bookworms

  • ‘It bored the tits off me,’ grins Bernadette, a forthright Irish lady with her hair in bunches. ‘Yes, everyone hated it,’ adds Jo, happily.

    ‘To read it on the tube –we were so embarrassed!’ says Sharon, a dead ringer for Rachel Weisz. The book in question is ‘Belle De Jour’, the memoirs of a high-class London prostitute, and tonight finds us at the Sunday meeting of the London Book Club – which only reads London-based books – in an old pub off Piccadilly. The first books they read as a group back in 2002, were Martin Amis’s ‘London Fields’ and Ian Sinclair’s ‘M25’, which both went down well. But it’s not always the way…

    ‘There was a story, with a bit of pace…’ offers Sharon of ‘Belle De Jour’.

    ‘Yeah, but it was rubbish!’ counters Justin, a doctor of infectious diseases.

    ‘I didn’t care about her, or her friends,’ says Jo. Feature continues

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    This isn’t what I expected a book group to be like. I thought it’d either be really prim, full of obsessively bookish people who didn’t actually live life, or that it might be like some of the book clubs my friends have tried to organise that ended in dissent and anguish after the first meeting.
    ‘I would never have been to one, and I couldn’t imagine anything worse,’ says Justin, who is in his mid-30s – they all are – and is sitting next to his pregnant wife, Joanne, an economist.

    ‘We got this round robin email from Sarah saying you might like to come along, and I came with some trepidation, expecting some sort of… discourse on English literature,’ he shudders. ‘But it’s nothing like that, it’s fantastic. You just enjoy the book, and talk about what it means to you.’

    It’s very democratic: everyone gets a turn at choosing a book, and whoever picks the book, picks the venue and organises the next meeting (roughly every six weeks). But Sarah is the common link; she went to work in New York a couple of years ago, not really knowing the city, and ended up joining a New York Book Club, where all the books had to be about New York (‘A good way to see the city and meet people’). Returning to London, she decided to set up the same thing here.

    ‘The idea originally was that we wouldn’t just do pubs; like the New York group, we’d do cafés and restaurants,’ she explains. ‘But of course, being Brits…’

    Today’s pub is Ye Grapes, a Victorian establishment just off Piccadilly. With its maroon velvet drapes, stuffed animals and wooden floors, it’s a suitably olde-worlde venue for this evening’s book, ‘The London Monster: A Sanguinary Tale’. It’s the story of a real-life London criminal who terrorised the city in the late eighteenth century by slashing women’s petticoats. As the assaults became more common, well-to-do ladies even started wearing protective copper covers over their bustles…

    ‘And there became a kudos to being attacked,’ says Sarah, ‘it meant you were beautiful, so women would make it up.’

    A media frenzy kicked off, there were copycat attacks and some men even started wearing badges that said ‘No Monster Club’, to show they weren’t him.

    ‘And that whole bundling thing!’ says Bernie gleefully. Eh? Bundling, in the eighteenth century?

    ‘Well, every time someone shouted “Oh, the monster!”, everyone’d run after them in the street.’

    ‘And what pickpockets used to do,’ says Phil, ‘is rob somebody, then shout, “The monster!”, point to the victim, and make their getaway!’

    Eventually, this particular ‘monster’ was apprehended: an unfortunate young dancer named Rhynwick Williams from Wales, who was, according to Sharon, ‘a bit wet’. London was disappointed, she says: ‘They wanted him to be scary and he was just a pathetic wimp.’

    The reason the book club works, it seems, is that this lot talk about books in the same way you’d talk about shopping, a funny dog you’d seen in the park or a terrible meal out. That is, they talk about books like they’re normal things; it’s totally informal, and the conversation splinters off into little side avenues, people chatting to each other, rather than making weighty declarations across the table. There have even been book club ‘liaisons’, as Sarah puts it: ‘Nobody that’s still here but one guy had a good hit rate; once with another member and another time when some women spied us in a pub. I think they thought: Ooh, new man, he’s a bit geezer but he reads books so he must have a sensitive side…’
    At Christmas, the club picks a posh hotel as its venue. Other top meetings have been held at the Wimbledon dog track for ‘Man Buys Dog’, where the author David Matthews attended and gave a talk, and the National Maritime Museum for ‘Latitude and Longitude’.

    ‘It’s about getting something of the atmosphere of the book,’ says Sarah, Sharon, hopefully putting forward a suggestion of George Orwell’s ‘Down And Out In London and Paris’ with one eye on a weekend away.

    But there is a serious, intellectual aspect to book club. ‘It’s not just about the history of London,’ says Bernie, ‘it’s the whole thing, the culture and the art…’

    And the pubs. As more drinks are bought, Justin hopefully proposes ‘101 Dalmatians’ for a meeting in Primrose Hill. ‘That’d be a nice summer one, actually…’ ponders Bernie, as conversation switches to who is going to bring the Pimm’s.

  • Add your comment to this feature

73 comments

  1. Posted by Debbie on 22 Jul 2009 11:32

    I'd really love to join your book club, please let me know if there's anymore room. Thanks.

  2. Posted by Kat Kosa on 13 Jul 2009 12:41

    I would love to join your book club. Is there a way to do this please? Could you please e-mail me? I would really appreciate it.
    Many thanks,
    Kat

  3. Posted by Lesley Hunt on 09 Jul 2009 12:40

    This sounds exactly what I was looking for how do I get in??

  4. Posted by mr c britten on 05 Jul 2009 11:02

    Any chance of joining the book club sounds like a lot of fun!
    Is there any room left in the Pub?
    Cliff

  5. Posted by Leigh Goldsmith on 21 Jun 2009 15:46

    I am an Irish writer living in London and I have just finished a novel (Stealing Chicken) which has been published by a New York publisher. I am interested in providing some copies to London book clubs for general review. If anyone runs a book club in the London area is interested in this, please let me know. I am based in North London but can send all over London.

  6. Posted by Leigh Goldsmith on 21 Jun 2009 15:42

    I am an Irish writer living in London. I have just finished a novel which has been publsihed by a New York publisher and would like to give some copies to some book clubs in the London area for general review. Anyone who runs a book club and is interested in this, please let me know. I am based in North London but can post to anywhere in London.

  7. Posted by Becs on 19 Jun 2009 13:22

    Really love to join the London Book club please send me an e-mail to become a new bookworm x

  8. Posted by Chris Howard on 14 Jun 2009 11:50

    Hi,
    If anyone is interested in joining an online based book club, drop me an email. Especially if you enjoy reviewing and writing. I am about to launch a free online site where any aspiring author can chat about their work or others.
    Send an email to chrtis@libboo.com - the site should be up and running in about 2 weeks and it's called Libboo

  9. Posted by Kate Tse on 31 May 2009 02:08

    I would like to join too!
    Can I have some contact details please!

  10. Posted by Jan on 09 May 2009 20:58

    I am looking for a book club in the Hampstead area. Can anyone let me know of one please. Thanks

  11. Posted by Nuvit on 05 May 2009 21:56

    Hi Erkin/Sara,
    Could you please email me the details of your bookclub.
    HusseNuv@aol.com
    Thanks

  12. Posted by Mairead on 04 May 2009 23:38

    Could someone send me details too please? maireadcahill88@hotmail.com

  13. Posted by Nuvit on 23 Apr 2009 15:09

    Errrr.....forgot to give my my contact details in order to receive info about the London Book club:
    HusseNuv@aol.com

  14. Posted by Nuvit on 23 Apr 2009 14:08

    Would also be keen to join. Could I please have the details of the London Book Club.

  15. Posted by Victoria Ventham on 02 Apr 2009 12:52

    Hi Sara and Erkin, could you please email me the details of your book group, its victoriaventham@hotmail.com
    Cheers!

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