Monthly Archives: December 2025

We’ve done the sums … of the books we’ve shared

One of my vital and ongoing sources of joy again this year was our silent book club group: meeting, discussing and sharing online and in person and savouring and expanding one’s horizons every month through our endlessly rich and varied combined reading lists. It never feels like homework or competition, just the most splendid kinds of sharing, encouragement and discovery.

How wonderful then to be able to fit in one more set of meetings before the end of this year!

Those meetings left me and, I hope, my fellow readers (including those of you relishing our meetings after the fact through this blog post) abuzz with more reading aspirations that will send me happily into another new year of reading.

One of yesterday’s zoom attendees praised Not the End of the World: How We Can Be the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet by Hannah Ritchie. According to the reader, not only were the book’s themes and examples heartening and optimistic, but the author’s contention that “I’ve done the sums” was also reassuring.

I’ve never “done the sums” with our collected reading lists, as the sums really aren’t the point, are they? But just for fun, I scanned through our 2025 lists … and discovered that we shared an average of 52 books amongst ourselves and with readers of this blog every month in the past year. So, it’s not homework or competition, as we’ve always contended, but isn’t it nice to know a new, fresh wave of books of all kinds awaits you every month?

One of silent book club member Lisa's books, I Become Her by Joe Hart (Photo by Lisa Presnell)

Group book pile at East Toronto Coffee Co, including titles by Margaret Atwood, Marcel Proust (in translation), Elena Armas, Bonnie Tsui + more, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Chapbook of poems from Wales on a table at East Toronto Coffee Co, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Readers reading at East Toronto Coffee Co, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Every title on our group’s always generous lists means that at least one (usually more) readers have given that title thoughtful attention. That doesn’t mean that every work on our lists is explicitly recommended, of course. Inclusion on this list always means that our readers have devoted time and consideration to a title – and that counts for a lot!


And yes, we usually have some extra book-related articles, resources, news and recommendations to share. These are items and tidbits that are often companions to books on the list, or are inspired or offered by our members and/or come up during our discussions and chat.

Our group’s previous reports and book lists are always available right here!

You can also check out links to articles, interviews and more here – some with San Francisco-based Silent Book Club founders Guinevere de La Mare and Laura Gluhanich, and some with us here in east end Toronto.

Learn more about the worldwide phenomenon of silent book clubs via Guinevere and Laura’s Silent Book Club web site. In fall 2023, they welcomed their 500th chapter … and with continuing, breathtaking momentum, they now boast almost 2,000 chapters … (There were around 60 chapters when we joined as the first Toronto chapter in 2017.) The SBC organization celebrated its 10th anniversary throughout October … and our chapter celebrated its 8th anniversary in early November.

You can find information on meetings happening around the world and close to where you live. Every club is different in size, format (in-person, virtual or hybrid) and vibe, so contact a club’s organizers beforehand if you have any questions or preferences. Please feel free to contact me for more information about our club and its offerings.

The happiest of happy reading, however you keep track … or don’t!

One of our silent book club members reveals …

Confessions of a Non-Reader

by Rev. J. Ruth Bartlett

As 2025 draws to a close, we get to enjoy another guest introduction to our monthly blog post. Dear fellow readers, meet Ruth Bartlett, who is a pastor at the Calvary Baptist Church, which is a short walk from East Toronto Coffee Co, where our readers meet in person.

Rev. Ruth BartlettI live in a world surrounded by books.

The collection of books and bookshelves where I reside fill every nook and cranny of our home with books my aunt has picked up over the years of mysteries, spy thrillers, and nursing research. At work, I look around my office, and I see shelves of books on all manners of theology, philosophy, spiritual help, self-help, church-help, international and community development, and ministry resources.

But I find it so so so hard to read any of it …

During my studies, we used the phrase “alone-together-time” for all the times when we knew we needed to do work, but knew we just could not concentrate on doing the work if we were trying to do it by ourselves. As a capital E Extrovert, I think that anything and everything is done better together, so it really helped me with my studies and forcing myself to reach and research alongside friends who were doing the same.

And so, when I was scrolling through Instagram one evening (instead of picking up a book and reading), the algorithm brought me to a silent book club chapter somewhere in the UK. The concept was so cute and cozy I just had to see if they were something here in Toronto – after all, Toronto seems to have pretty well every kind of group going!

After some research, I was so excited to find that not only was there a silent book club chapter in Toronto, but right here, in my very own neighbourhood!

Vicki has been so incredibly warm and welcoming, and I’ve been so inspired by all of the readers in this group, hearing many, varied types of books that I never find on my own shelves, but find myself intrigued to try.

Joining the silent book club helped me reconnect with the genres that brought me joy before the days of university and seminary. I’ve enjoyed a biography of one of my favourite actors, reread a novel that piqued my attention as an elementary school kid, and now I’m reading the classic Jane Austen novel Pride and Prejudice in anticipation of trying my first murder mystery novel The Murder of Mr. Wickham!

Though I still can’t quite call myself a reader, per se, I think I can finally shed the non-reader title knowing how much I enjoy reading alongside the wonderful people of the East End Toronto chapter of the silent book club.

Silent book club member Kath's books (and a rugby match on the TV in the background), including The Cafe With No Name by Robert Seethaler and Things That Disappear by Jenny Erpenbeck (Photo by Kathryn Eastman)

Silent book club member Jen's books, including The Girl from Berlin, by Kate Hewitt (Photo by Jennifer D. Foster)

Silent book club member Jess' books, including The Gardener’s Guide to Native Plants by Rick Gray and Shaun Booth (Photo by Jess Bootsma)

One of silent book club member Lisa's books, The Heart's Invisible Furies by John Boyne (Photo by Lisa Presnell)

Silent book club member Ruth's books, including The Murder of Mr. Wickham by Claudia Gray (Photo by Ruth Bartlett)

Silent book club member Vicki (that's me, with my signature messy hair and glasses), on screen getting ready for our zoom meeting, with books stacked next to my computer, including works by Marcel Proust (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Group book pile at East Toronto Coffee Co, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Group book pile at East Toronto Coffee Co, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Group book pile at East Toronto Coffee Co, accompanied by coffee and pastries (Photo by Vicki Ziegler)

Every title on our group’s always immense lists means that at least one (usually more) readers have given that title thoughtful attention. That doesn’t mean that every work on our lists is expressly recommended, of course. Inclusion on this list always means that our readers have devoted time and consideration to a title – and that counts for a lot!


Here are some extra book-related articles, resources, news and recommendations, items and tidbits that are often companions to books on the list, or are inspired or offered by our members and/or come up during our discussions and chat.

  • Silent book club member Richard took part of his book update time this month to introduce us all to the ICCT Book Club, the Icelandic Canada Club of Toronto’s gathering of readers, who rally round the motto: Að ganga með bók í maganum: To walk with a book in your stomach. Everyone gives birth to a book. As you’ll see at the link, they’ve jumped enthusiastically into their relaunch this fall with some great books, with more ahead going into 2026.
  • The Walrus recently showcased the many book club choices readers in Toronto can consider, of which silent book clubs are just one.

Our group’s previous reports and book lists are always available right here!

You can also check out links to articles, interviews and more here – some with San Francisco-based Silent Book Club founders Guinevere de La Mare and Laura Gluhanich, and some with us here in east end Toronto.

Learn more about the worldwide phenomenon of silent book clubs via Guinevere and Laura’s Silent Book Club web site. In fall 2023, they welcomed their 500th chapter … and with continuing, breathtaking momentum, they now boast almost 2,000 chapters … (There were around 60 chapters when we joined as the first Toronto chapter in 2017.) The SBC organization celebrated its 10th anniversary throughout October … and our chapter celebrated its 8th anniversary in early November.

You can find information on meetings happening around the world and close to where you live. Every club is different in size, format (in-person, virtual or hybrid) and vibe, so contact a club’s organizers beforehand if you have any questions or preferences. Please feel free to contact me for more information about our club and its offerings.

Happy reading till next we gather!