San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

‘A WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE’: LA JOLLA-BASED BOOK CLUB MARKS 65 YEARS

- BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON Mackin-solomon writes for the U-T Community Press.

Much like books themselves, a La Jolla-based book club has covered a lot in the past 65 years. The club’s changes might not be as dramatic as art-based covers, a sea of celebrity biographie­s and the introducti­on of e-readers, but the group has seen members come and go following marriages, moves, births and deaths and has somehow kept the same meeting schedule and enthusiasm for reading and literary discussion.

Since its founding in 1957, the group (which doesn’t have a formal name) has read around 11 books a year — more than 700 total. It started with five La Jolla residents and now has 16 members. This month the group is reading “The Promise” by Damon Galgut.

Original member Sandy Levinson said the founders were young mothers who were not in the workforce and “wanted to have this book club as a bit of an escape from the rituals of motherhood.”

With Levinson’s mother in a Great Books Program that provided some of the early recommenda­tions, the club started with “foundation­al classics,” founding member Gerry Horwitz said. “That’s one of the reasons we were able to keep going; we had such a good start.”

From there, the group decided it needed a dedicated discussion leader. It found one who led other book groups and posed questions for the group to consider.

“We wanted to go deeper and we wanted books that took us deeper,” Horwitz said.

The group sought discussion­s that went beyond “the usual ones you might have with a friend after you read the same book,” such as “How did you feel when this character died?” or “What did you think of the end?”

One of the club’s later discussion leaders was a retired political science professor, and some of the book choices at the time shifted toward that topic.

Then the members occasional­ly would lead discussion­s themselves.

As members cycled out as they entered the workforce, moved or, in some cases, disagreed with book choices, new members cycled in.

Upon her retirement as a college professor 14 years ago, Judy Price Lewis was invited to join by her sister-inlaw and founding member Teddie Lewis.

“Most of the women had a college education, were interested in the world, had intelligen­t and lively opinions, all at a time when women were supposed to be at home raising their kids,” Judy said of the club’s history. “We needed an intellectu­al outlet … and this was a wonderful place for it.”

It’s also been a place for fun. On anniversar­ies and when meetings overlapped with holidays, the club would hold parties and invite spouses. A favorite was the annual costume party, where members dressed as literary characters.

In some cases, the books motivated members to travel. Phyllis Minick went to Africa when her children were grown, inspired by the books the club read that were set there.

“Very often there are books we read that I wouldn’t have picked up and read. It’s a boon to me,” Levinson said. “I also think discussing a book gives you an insight you wouldn’t otherwise have. There are issues that come up that you might not have thought about, and it crystalize­s what the book is really about. … I find it an enriching part of my life.”

Horwitz agreed, saying: “I have gotten a lot of stimulatio­n from the books we’ve read. There are many books that we have read and discussed that I never heard of before. There are many books I didn’t want to read, but I read them because if I am going to be in book club, I’m going to read the book. But I find I change my mind after I read and discuss the book. That has been a wonderful experience; it made me a better reader and a better analyst.”

Present and future

At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when restrictio­ns were placed on gatherings, some questioned the club’s future.

Moving the meetings online has enabled some members who resigned from the club after moving out of the area to come back in, including one who now lives in New York, Minick said.

It also opened the door for the next generation of members — including Teddie Lewis’ daughter Jennifer, who lives in Ann Arbor, Mich., and teaches at Wayne State University. In hopes that her mother would be comfortabl­e attending an in-person book club celebratio­n May 11, Jennifer flew out to La Jolla. Teddie was not, but Jennifer went in her stead because the club was “such a huge part of my mother’s life and mine,” she said.

“I always knew about it, and when I was in college, I was invited to a book club meeting, which felt like a really big step up,” Jennifer told the La Jolla Light in front of some of the founding members. “And I still remember reading the book in advance and thinking I was at a fancy college and I would impress everyone. But listening to the conversati­on, I was blown away and hearing things that changed how I saw the book and how I saw all of you, who were always my mother’s social friends. I didn’t understand the intellectu­al power in the room. The image I had of you was not full.”

Jennifer would continue to go to meetings when she was in town. And at the May 11 gathering, Jennifer officially joined the club.

“They helped me read and see the world differentl­y,” she said.

 ?? ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON U-T COMMUNITY PRESS ?? Gerry Horwitz, Sandy Levinson and Phyllis Minick are three of the founding members of the book club.
ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON U-T COMMUNITY PRESS Gerry Horwitz, Sandy Levinson and Phyllis Minick are three of the founding members of the book club.

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