Get the Best Winter Activities
Our mother-daughter book clubs became so much more than just a way to make reading cool. The friendships we’ve nurtured there and the time we’ve spent talking about things that are important to us have enriched our lives in ways we never could have envisioned back then. I look forward to being equally surprised by the new ground we chart in years to come.
How to Start Your Own Mother-Daughter Book Club
1. Who will you invite? You may want to begin with a core group of two or three girls and their moms who each invite two or three others. This prevents one person being the only source of connection in the group and allows all participants to help ‘build’ the club. You want to have enough people for a good discussion even if some members can’t make it, but not so many that you’ll feel overwhelmed at a meeting. Try to make sure all the girls are at a similar reading level.
2. How often will you meet? Every month? Every other month? Will you take breaks during summer and winter vacation?
3. When will you meet? Early evening with dinner? After dinner for dessert? Weekend lunch? I’ve found that a consistent meeting time, like the first Monday or the third Thursday, makes it easier for members to put book club on the calendar.
4. Where will you meet? Decide whether you’d prefer to rotate between homes or find a public meeting place such as a community room at the local library.
5. How will you choose books? You may want to cultivate a relationship with a youth librarian at school or a community library, or check out websites such as kidsreads.com and teenreads.com for ideas. Ask girls and moms to choose reading selections together for the best success.
6. Perhaps start here. The Mother-Daughter Book Club by Heather Vogel Frederick (Aladdin) is a great first book club selection for girls aged 9-12: This story of four moms and their daughters in a reading group explores how moms and daughters don’t always understand each other, and how talking about books can help.