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Squirrels Visit - October 2025
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Alison Bruce Visit - 3rd October 2025
2025-10-05 13:26

Book Club

Our friendly Book Club meets on the third Tuesday of the month in the Library at 3.30pm. We welcome anyone who enjoys reading and likes
talking about books. We don't do 'lit crit' but we discuss why we like/didn't like the book choice. We exchange tips on recent reads that we think others might enjoy, and then wander on to a wide range of subjects. You don't have to buy the books – we take turns to choose a book from a Cambridgeshire Libraries multi-copy list. If you are interested in joining us, send a request to Sally via info@haddenhamlibrarycambs.co.uk or give your contact details to a Library Volunteer.

 

Upcoming read:

Next month's read ‘In a Blink of an Eye’ by Jo Callaghan will be discussed on Tuesday 18th November. All ages and genders are welcome, and anyone born after 1980 would be greatly appreciated for their new perspectives! As always, we can provide a copy of the book, so no need to buy one.

 

To join us, speak to a Library volunteer, or drop a line to info@haddenhamlibrarycambs.co.uk.

OCTOBER BOOK REVIEW - LESSONS IN CHEMISTRY

 

On October 21st we discussed ‘Lessons in Chemistry’, the hugely popular and successful debut novel by Bobbie Garmus (published in 2022). It's about a female research chemist, Elizabeth Zott, who becomes a daytime cooking show sensation, and it was a fairly easy read which was thoroughly enjoyed by most of the group. Those who had read it before were happy to read it again and it didn't suffer from a second read.

A few members found it hard to get into, a couple found some elements irritating, one declared herself indifferent but it was only a definite thumb down for one person.

The main complaint was that the end of the book was just too neat and tidy, all threads tied off in a few paragraphs as though the author had grown tired of writing and just wanted the book over with.

In the main we found it full of humour, in some instances laugh-out-loud funny, and the characters were likeable and well written. The stand-out star character is Six-Thirty the dog, based on a real dog owned by the author. Several readers used the word ‘quirky’ to describe the book, very appropriate when a dog gets some of the best lines.

‘Lessons in Chemistry’ contains some strong messages about women, their place in society in the 1950s (mostly expected to be homemakers and caregivers), and the feminists who laid the groundwork for the equality activism of the 1960s. It certainly got us talking about different decades and the various industries our members had worked in, and whether things have changed for women in the workplace and in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) in particular. The answer is probably yes...but not enough.

We don't have anyone younger than Gen X in the group and we wondered what younger readers would think of the gender-based attitudes of the ‘50s and ‘60s and the (to our eyes) discriminatory and appalling behaviour towards the main character, Elizabeth.

If you’d like to read the novel, or are in two minds about it, there’s an insightful interview with Bobbie Garmus here: https://www.penguin.co.uk/.../bonnie-garmus-interview...

We welcomed Susan as a new member this month (it was a baptism of fire as our only dissenter)