A Book Club of One

Kindle

You know how every girl you ever knew was in Girl Scouts?

I was, too. I remember the uniform and the sash, especially the sash, because I’d get new badges and, if my mother was in one of her too bummed out to sew episodes, I’d fastened the badges to my sash with big safety pins. Later, when my own daughter was in Girl Scouts and I’d offer to sew on her badges, she’d roll her eyes at my big lopping stitch and say, “It’s fine, Mom. I’ll just use a safety pin.” It’s the Circle of Life.

So even though I was in Girl Scouts, I don’t remember anything about it except the badges. I don’t remember a thing about the other girls, the leader or even where the meetings were held. I don’t know what we did in the meetings. I just know about my sash and my badges and all the safety pins. I could probably diagram that sash right this very second if I could draw.

My forgotten Girl Scout life notwithstanding, I love the idea of joining things.

Like a book club.

I know people in book clubs but I’ve never been in one. Sometimes the people in book clubs complain about the books they are reading and explain that it wasn’t their turn to choose or they had to go with the will of the people. This wouldn’t jibe with my wild late night Kindle buys where one night I’m reading about brain surgery and the next about Martha Washington. My mad book-buying is the ultimate of living in the moment, albeit it dark and alone, since I don’t care about how wacky my virtual bookshelf looks (yes, I really did read all those pimpology books) and nobody but me knows whether I actually read what I bought, like that’s some measure of a book’s utility, having been completely read. Some books are satisfied with having been leafed. No matter. I’ve directed the executor of my will to smash my Kindle with one of my old high-heeled boots; what happened with me and my Kindle, late at night with my bedside lamp burning and the mister sleeping is stuff for the grave.

Interestingly (or not), I’ve never been asked to join a book club. Maybe people look at me and figure I don’t have what it takes to finish a book or maybe they think I’d bake lousy cookies. I’ve jacked around my thinking about this lifelong rejection by deciding that I wouldn’t want to join a book club that would have me as a member. And then I think if I was in a book club, I’d be all about gathering badges and pinning them to my sash with giant safety pins. It ended up being the only thing that mattered with Girl Scouts, the only thing I remember and cherish: badges, in rows, their safety pins all pointing the same way. A book club experience would be ripe for a repeat of badge glorification.

Anyway, it doesn’t matter. I like my own little book club, my secret nutty society. It suits me.

___________

Originally published in 2016. And, well, I still don’t belong to a Book Club.

5 Comments on “A Book Club of One

  1. I was a Brownie scout for one year. Somewhere I have the photo of the group to prove it. I did go on to have a triumphant career as a leader with my girls. Proud to say I achieved outstanding cookie mom status plus the rank of regional cookie manager for all our local troops. That glory meant I ran a cookie warehouse from my garage. If I had a picture of that I would display it for visitors. My sorted and organized stacks plus always updated and accurate inventory sheets were glorious. I have also never been in a book club. I had a great desire to be in one for some time but then I realized they have nothing really to do with books.

    • Outstanding cookie mom is an accomplishment – it’s a lot to keep straight plus there’s everybody’s anxiety about their orders, etc., etc. I always headed for the door when they called for volunteers.

  2. I was a scout for just one year and I was expecting big adventure, but all I remember is making the oranges with cloves type of craft so I was done. I did enjoy trying to earn the badges with my sister and friend over the summer and we initialed all of the little places on each page and our leader said no. Doesn’t count. I was in a small book club years ago with a few moms and teachers from my school. It started out okay , we took turns a holding books and met at each other’s houses. After about it year of meeting every month or six weeks, less people showed up. And someone took offense to the book chosen and refused to read it and we slowly ended it. I rad that most book clubs only last for 2 years or less and it was so accurate. I’m happy to so be in my own book club now.

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